Author: Remy Commisso

  • Reflections on Catskill Folk History, A Decade After Pete Seeger’s Death

    The Hudson Valley’s Catskill Mountains are known as the powerhouse of folk music. The land’s rich history is a testament to its iconic music scene. No matter where you wander through the Catskills, you’ll pick up the musical culture that these small communities have. But what brought folk music to the Catskills in the first place?

    To start, the history of colonial Catskills is right there in the name. Dutch settlers in the 1600s brought many of their traditions and their language to the Catskills. The old Dutch word “kill” translates to river or stream in English. The word “kaats” translates to cat, referring to the bobcats and mountain lions. So the region was coined “Kaatskill,” later anglicized to Catskill.

    In pre-colonial times the Catskills was made up of the Mohican, Munsee and Lenape nations, that is until Henry Hudson sailed up the river now named after him in 1609. Robert Juet, one of Hudson’s crew members, was said to be the first European to take note of the Catskills specifically.

    photo courtesy of winewitandwisdomswe.com

    In 1667 the Anglo-Dutch War ended with the Breda Treaty in which England received “New Netherlands.” In the decades to come, more English settlers moved to the land, but the Catskills never lost its Dutch Heritage. Sojourner Truth, who was born over a century later, grew up in a Dutch Plantation in Ulster County. Although she spoke English, she never lost her Dutch accent.

    As more European settlers moved to the Catskills, different ethnic towns like Germantown, located east of the river, began to pop up. 

    Although New York had long been colonized, it was still too unexplored throughout the 19th century to be substantially populated. The Catskills were partially desolate but it was the land itself that maintained a community of people in the area. Fur trade and beaver trapping were both profitable trades. The abundance of hemlock bark in the areas allowed tanneries to flourish. Needless to say, these industries brought more and more families to the Catskills. 

    New York City began to become dependent on the Catskills. Reservoirs in the land have been providing water to the city’s residents since 1916.

    As water was flowing from the Catskill reservoirs, the region pulled in more and more city residents. In 1906 the Arts Students League of New York City opened a summer school in Woodstock. This was the beginning of the arts and music town that we know today. 

    The League brought in mostly visual artists, around 200 students a year from 1906-1922 and again from 1947-1979. They were said to continue their individualistic lives, enjoying their solitude outside of the city.

    Perhaps the most famous artist that moved to Woodstock was Bob Dylan. Dylan moved to the small town in 1965 after visiting with his then girlfriend Joan Baez. It was above Cafe Espresso on Tinker Street that he wrote Another Side of Bob Dylan and Bringing It All Back Home.

    Self Portrait

    After a motorcycle accident, he continued his private life in Woodstock and turned to a new artistic outlet- painting. In 1970 he painted his album cover for Self Portrait. He also started working with a group of musicians called The Hawks, now known as The Band. They collaborated on Dylan’s album The Basement Tapes and The Band’s album Music From Big Pink. Dylan also created the Big Pink album art. The Band’s Levon Helm went on to make a lasting creation in Woodstock with Levon Helm Studios.

    It wasn’t only artists that flocked to the Catskills. The year-round scenery drew tourists from all over New York to high end resorts and hotels. Perhaps the most significant hotel in Catskill history was The Catskill Mountain House located in Palenville. This almost mythical house opened in 1824 and was visited by presidents U.S Grant, Chester A. Arthur, and Theodore Roosevelt. The Catskills began to be overshadowed by a more Upstate park, The Adirondacks, and the mountain house had its last season in 1941. It was demolished in 1963 despite the passions of preservationists. 

    The modern equivalent to the Catskill Mountain House may be the Mohonk Mountain House, a resort and spa located overlooking a glacial lake. The Victorian style castle was built in 1869 and brings in guests from all over the world. The house sits on top of 40,000 acres of protected land thanks to conservationist efforts of the past. 

    In 1904 the state gained ownership of 92,708 acres of land officially making The Catskills a protected State Park. 

    Catskill tourism began to bring in families specifically of Jewish faith. This became known as the Borscht Belt, referring to the Eastern European soup. In the Borscht Belt heyday during the ’50s and ’60s, more than 1000 Jewish resorts were scattered the Hudson Valley. Today, the Borscht Belt Museum in Ellenville is dedicated to the rich Jewish history in the Hudson Valley.

    With its forests, mountains and streams, the Catskills were the perfect terrains for summer camps, one of which was Camp Woodland. Woodland was founded in 1940 by Norman Studer who was an educator at the Elizabeth Irwin School in New York City. Studer’s purpose with Woodland was to give children a destination full of diverse folk culture.

    Michael Pastor, who was a Woodland camper from New York City, remembers what it was like to be a part of this famous camp in folk history.  Pastor says the eight weeks of camp he attended annually from 1958 to its last year in 1962 consisted of classic camp activities like football, games, outdoor excursions and of course music. 

    “A lot of campers played guitars, and so there was an awful lot of music going on all the time. I started playing guitar when I was 12 at camp,” He said. “It was kind of hard to hear yourself anyway, because there were 30 other guitars playing and a few banjo players as well.”

    In a time of McCarthyism in America, Woodland was called “Camp Red” by conservatives referring to its teachings of inclusion and community building. According to Pastor, there was never any outright democratic or communist values being preached, but many of the families that sent their children to Woodland were leftward leaning. 

    photo courtesy of Camp Woodland, Phoenicia, New York Facebook.com

    Pastor remembers the diverse music the campers performed. “Some of the music were Union songs from the 1930s. Also, there was a variety of international flavor to the music. We would learn songs from different languages,” he said. 

    Studor was always reaching out to the local community to teach kids about the history of the area. Pastor says he remembers community members including a local historian coming in to tell stories of the tanneries and music of the past. 

    Woodland also attracted legendary artists like Ella Jenkins and Pete Seeger. Seeger performed every year for all age groups, inspiring the whole camp.

    Pastor says that being around music all summer and seeing artists like Seeger sharing their talents ignited a passion for music for campers. “A person who I met during my very first summer camp, my very first day of camp, Peter Simon, he and I are still very close friends and he, inspired by Pete Seeger, became a banjo player. We had a bluegrass band when we were in high school and we still get together regularly and play sort of old time traditional countries,” Pastor noted. 

    Seeger was born in New York City and raised in Dutchess County. He was first inspired to pick up the banjo when he traveled to Bascom Lamar Lunsford’s folk festival in Asheville, North Carolina at the age of 16. In 1938, he settled in New York City with other folk musicians known as The Almanac Singers in “The Almanac House.” 

    In 1949 he began to perform with a group known as The Weavers. A year later, the anti-communist book Red Channels came out which accused Seeger of being a communist. He became a blacklisted musician and the accusation loomed over Seeger’s head for decades. 

    According to his daughter he was never a self proclaimed communist. “He believed in community and he believed in it, whether it was a family, a school, a town, a country, the earth, but he wasn’t a communist. He was more like a ‘communityist,’” said one of his daughters Tinya Seeger. “He wanted good people who could do good things in office. That would be where his politics lay.”

    She said that although he was never a communist himself, he was curious about life under communism. He visited North Vietnam during the Vietnam war along with communist China and Soviet Russia multiple times.

    In 1955 he was called before the House of Un-American Activities Committee and was questioned about his political beliefs. He refused to answer their questions leading to 10 counts of contempt in 1956 followed by an indictment two years later. 

    During his blacklisted period, Seeger still created new music and performed all over the country. Some critics believe it was in these years that his best work transpired. He played gigs in smaller venues and college campuses, communities where folk itself began. His children’s albums were a huge success in summer schools and camps like Woodland. 

    At multiple performances, conservative community members would protest outside the venue but it never stopped him from performing. “He was happy when he saw free speech. He really believed very much in a person’s right to express how they feel, that you should be able to do that and life goes on,” remarked Seeger. 

    No two Pete Seeger shows were one in the same. He based his performance on the people that were in the audience. If there were children, he would play children’s songs like “Abiyoyo” or “The Foolish Frog.” If the audience was mostly older adults he would play songs to remind them of their childhood like “If I Had A Hammer.” His set list wouldn’t be determined until he was on stage.  

    At some of his concerts, audience members could leave him notes on the stage before the performance started. He made sure to read every one of them. 

    Seeger narrowly escaped prison time in 1962 when a Court of Appeals decided his 1961 conviction was faulty and deserted the case. Already infamous within right leaning circles, he became heavily involved in the civil rights movement and antiwar movement during the Vietnam War. 

    He was also active in local initiatives as well. His home in Beacon was located along the polluted Hudson River and he was determined to help this ecosystem. Seeger, along with some of his friends in the community, built a sloop named Clearwater, modeling the same boats that sailed the Hudson in the 18th and 19th centuries.

    photo courtesy of Billboard.com

    He sailed up and down the river educating listeners about the problem and collecting donations in his banjo case. His efforts actually cleared the river and although the river isn’t completely absent of garbage and pollutants, Hudson Valley residents today enjoy a much cleaner river than those in the 1960s “In those last 10 years of his life, he was trying to say things that were meaningful,” Seeger said.

    Seeger understood the relationship between the art of folk music and community. According to his daughter, he liked living in Beacon with his family and a generation of adults that were raised on his music. “He created something that was like a camp experience within the Hudson Valley. Maybe it’s just that the same people were coming to the smaller gatherings that were happening around,” Seeger notes. “I think they were carrying on the tradition.”

    Pastor, who is one of those campers carrying on the tradition, says he feels a strong community surrounding folk. “There is a bond that people feel throughout all these decades and I think if you were to ask people, you would find that music is a part of that shared experience, that’s part of that bond. Music was so interwoven with camp life, it’s kind of hard to describe,” he said. 

    Seeger is survived by his family including Tinya Seeger who lives in the Seeger home in Beacon, New York.

    A decade after Seeger’s death, the tradition of Catskill folk continues. The music that was birthed from the land is dependent on the story of the Catskills. Folk was a distraction from work, a time of recreation and bonding for rural families. It was an expression of self for the collection of artists that gathered in the region.

    Another family that carries on the trend of intergenerational folk is the Helm Family. The Arkansas native Levon Helm of The Band settled in Woodstock in 1967. In 1975, he built Levon Helm Studios, putting down permanent roots in Woodstock. His family, including his daughter Amy Helm, continue his legacy with “The Helm Family Midnight Ramble,” an annual celebration of his art at Levon Helm Studios.

    Today, the studio showcases independent artists and bands from all over the country. 

    Eggy at Levon Helm Studios – photo by Zak Radick

    Helm recorded the Dirt Farmer album in his studio which won a Grammy Award for Best Traditional Folk Album in 2008. Guitarist Larry Campbell, who also worked with Dylan, produced the album alongside Amy Helm. They both sang and performed on the album as well.

    Dirt Farmer is not only an award-winning album, but it was deeply personal for Helm. It was his comeback album, his first since 1982. He started recording as he was battling throat cancer, despite the damage to his vocals. 

    The acoustic tracks are a nod to his Arkansas roots, but they have a clear Catskill influence. Each song tells a story of the human condition. “Anna Lee” is about children who remember their late mother by her lullabies. “Wide River To Cross” is the final track on the album. In it Levon describes his journey of life, being “only halfway home.”

    Amy Helm, who has recorded solo music at the studio, was born in Woodstock and grew up watching her father perform. With her three folk albums, she continues to carry on her family’s legacy and tour around the country. 

    The Catskills and its history have shaped perhaps hundreds of solo folk musicians as well as contemporary bands.

    The Felice Brothers, originally from Palenville in the Catskills, are one of the most popular folk groups today. They’ve released ten albums including their latest 2024 album Valley of Abandoned Songs. Ian Felice (guitar/vocals), James Felice (piano/vocals), Jeske Hume (bass), and Will Lawrence (drums) bring back the raw, acoustic sound of the region.

    In a recent interview with NYS Music, James Felice stated that the category of Folk and Americana felt limiting to the band early in its takeoff, but later, he embraced the labels. “All of our music, the way we play and the music we grew up with is folk music. It’s the music that we are most connected to. So yeah, I’m okay with that. I think we’ve been doing this long enough to have our sort of thing,” he said. 

    Valley of Abandoned Songs

    Hudson Valley artist Mikaela Davis moved from Rochester, after her first album, Delivery. Davis got her degree in harp performance at the Crane School of Music in Potsdam. The harp, an unusual instrument in the genre of folk, compliments her whimsical vocals and takes the instrumentation to a new level. She produces a blend of indie-pop and Catskill folk inspired by sounds from the ’60s, the golden era of music in this region.

    Davis records and performs with her own musical family. She has known her drummer Alex Coté since childhood, guitarist Cian McCarthy and bassist Shane McCarthy from college and she met steel guitarist Kurt Johnson in her early twenties.

    The Bones of J.R Jones, another artist from Central New York, started his musical career playing in hardcore punk bands until he became more interested in American blues and folk musicians of the 1930s and ’40s. He officially launched his musical project, The Bones of J.R Jones, in 2012 as an independent artist.

    Although his music is categorized as folk, indie and punk, he doesn’t write with genre in mind. “I honestly believe the music we create is a reflection of life experiences,” he said. Since his start, he has released five albums. In 2021, he relocated from Brooklyn to a Catskill farmhouse. 

    He says, in his experience, the Catskills have been a welcoming environment for him and the music community is supportive and uplifting. There is also something very special about the slow sleepy hills and mountains here. “We are just out of the reach of the weekend crowd from NYC so in a way, it stays true to itself. It’s a magical place full of inspiration,” he notes.

    Upstate, with Brooklyn connections, settled in The Hudson Valley and over the past 11 years of performing together, have released three bold harmonious albums. 

    Members Mary Webster, Melanie Glenn, Harry D’Agostino and Dylan McKinstry recorded their most recent album, You Only Got A Few, in the Hudson Valley at The Building in Marlboro, New York and Greenpoint Recording Collective in Brooklyn, another musical hotspot for independent music.

    Laura Zarougian is a solo artist who describes herself as an “Armenian Cowgirl,” inspired by American folk as well as her Armenian roots. She is a multi-instrumentalist and a powerful vocalist. Her songs tell stories of her family lineage and explore themes of searching for home. “Cairo,” from her 2023 album Nayri, tells the story of her great grandfather’s death and her grandmother’s journey to bring his body back to Cairo.

    Zarougian grew up in Boston, but her musical career blossomed in Brooklyn. She now lives in Red Hook, a town right next to the Hudson River. “I do feel like there is a really strong sense of community here in which people want to support local musicians and do their best to promote them,” she said. Nayri is a seven-track album recorded with her partner, drummer Mike Alan Hams. The storytelling in her music captures the spirit of Catskill folk. “It’s definitely got some twang and elements of Americana and folk. But a lot of my songs, especially on my first album, had to do with my Armenian American identity,” she remarked. “I think folk songs have to do with place and longing and all of these things that are just part of the human experience.”

    The folks that are keeping folk alive are the “grassroots” groups and families that create music without the pressure commercial industry influences.

    Just days before his passing in 2014, Seeger attended the annual celebration of Martin Luther King, Jr., in Beacon. 

    “What did my father do? You know, sometimes I say he was a singer and entertainer, but he was somebody that was really trying to help people get along,” Seeger said. “His version of helping them communicate was to write music.” 

    Seeger is still one of the most well-known folk singers in America and his work in activism and the folk revival movement live on. 

  • Brooklyn’s George Steel Releases “Not a Cowboy”

    George Steel, a new NYC based project released his debut hyper-pop single, “Not A Cowboy” on August 23.

    The project is a collaborative effort of Michael Quint of Font and Ernesto Grey of Farmer’s wife. The first single off the Steel album is accompanied by a music video directed by Blake Nelson of Font. The video features a washed-up Steel walking around the city in reference to the ending of Claire Denis’s 1999 film, Beau Travail.

    In his upcoming album, Desires On The Range, Steel uses political and religious titles like “The Next Great American President” and “Sunday Service” to play into his aesthetic of a patriotic cowboy club rat.  His music is described as Avante-Garde ketamine-pop. His songs mix traditional country instruments with repetitive loops and absurdist lyrics to embody his character. He uses distorted vocals and synths and samples to create his hyper, theatrical album. 

    Not A Cowboy has more of an 80’s new wave sound. The single starts out intense with harsh vocals but softens with an upbeat chorus and production.

    Quint’s staccato voice embody Steel. He has taken the character to live performances around Brooklyn. So far, he’s performed with bands such as the Night Traders and The Melancholy Party. 

    To keep up with new music and Steel’s performances, you can follow Steel on Instagram @georgesteelusa

  • Dispatch Joins Boston Pops at Tanglewood to Close out August

    On Aug. 31, Dispatch and the Boston Pops will conclude Tanglewood’s 2024 popular artist concert series. 

    Dispatch tanglewood

    Chad Urmston, Brad Corrigan, and Pete Heimbold formed their Indie band Dispatch in the 90’s as they were attending Middlebury College in Vermont. The band is most known for their songs “The General” and “Band Bang.” After Graduating, they relocated to Boston to further the band’s influence. In 2002, after six albums, the band thought Dispatch had come to an end and even performed a farewell concert in Boston Known as “The Last Dispatch” two years later.

    Although the band did take a break from recording and creating music this wasn’t truly “The Last Dispatch.” They came together for multiple benefit concerts in the following years and in 2011 they announced their official reunion. Today, Corrigan and Urmston make up the band and in 2021 they released Break Our Fall.

    Joining this indie jam band is Grenadian-Canadian jazz vocalist, Kaia Kater. Her music is a genre blend of Appalachian and Canadian folk. She started releasing music straight out of high school with her first EP Old Soul in 2013. Her most recent album Strange Medicine is a reflection of Kater’s life and a celebration of marginalized people.  

    Dispatch tanglewood

    Singing alongside these three artists are the Boston Pops who have performed several times throughout Tanglewood. This concert series located in the Berkshire mountains of Western Massachusetts is the summer home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and offers classical concerts as well as performances from contemporary artists.

    To purchase tickets to Dispatch’s performance you can visit the Tanglewood website here.

  • Up and Coming Songwriter Fox Indigo Releases Energetic Single “Gravity”

    Bushwick folk-indie artist Fox Indigo released her lyrical upbeat new single “Gravity” with Rexius Records.

    Indigo has a beautiful almost haunting voice. The instrumentation melts together with her vocals perfectly. Her single’s production has a classic indie sound and a catchy chorus, but her talent brings “Gravity” to the next level. 

    “Gravity” is “about pursuing someone who’s leaving a toxic relationship & how you’re aware that it’s a terrible idea, but you can’t stop yourself. How gravity keeps pulling you back no matter how hard you fight it,” Indigo told NYS Music.

    “Gravity” is the second single released this year as “Trail Of Tears” came out in June.

    During quarantine, Indigo single handedly created her first album Seven Seas from scratch in her bedroom. In 2022 she signed with Rexius Records and finally released Seven Seas

    Indigo says songwriting comes naturally to her. “Sometimes a melody feels like a pre-existing cosmic idea floating in the ether, waiting for the right soul to grab it,” she said. When it comes to lyrics she usually “vomits” words in a notebook and chooses the most meaningful lines. 

    Along with singing and songwriting, Indigo has other creative passions. She has been organizing her own events for the past 10 years and even started a music collective called Get Carried Away Collective. Her goal with the collective is to uplift other DIY artists like herself. “I’ve grown pretty tired of how traditional venues treat artists in this city over the past decade of performing here and I wanted to create a space where people could put on their own shows,” she said. 

    With her solo work, Indigo has another project in the works. She is aiming to complete an EP by next spring. 

    Her advice to other young DIY artists is to keep creating things they are passionate about. “In a world stifled by corporate influence & inflation, reach out to your community to work together on projects, outside of the oppressive venues and corporations. We’re powerful when we work together,” Indigo said. 

    To keep up with her work you can follow her on Instagram at @foxindigomusic.

  • Classic Mystery Tour Announce Date With Schenectady Saratoga Symphony Orchestra

    The renowned Beatles show “Classical Mystery Tour: A Tribute to The Beatles” is coming to Schenectady with the Schenectady Saratoga Symphony Orchestra on Feb. 2. 

    The concert features 24 Beatles songs performed exactly how they were originally recorded. Audience members will experience “Penny Lane” with the fiery trumpet section and “Yesterday” complemented by strings and the acoustic guitar. The band and orchestra meet on the MainStage at Proctors, a historical theater in Schenectady’s downtown area.

    Classical Mystery Tour is made up of four band members, Jim Owen on rhythm guitar, piano, and vocals; Tony Kishman on bass guitar, piano, and vocals; Tom Teeley on lead guitar and vocals; and Chris Camilleri on drums and vocals. They are nearly identical to the Beatles. Both their physical appearance and voices match the legendary band. 

    In over 22 years, the show has traveled to the U.S., Canada, Europe, Asia, and Australia and has performed with over 100 orchestras. Their very first performance was with the Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Orange County California in 1996. 
    Now fans in Upstate New York can experience the closest thing to seeing the Beatles live. To buy tickets, you can visit the Proctors box office or go to the Schenectady Saratoga Symphony Orchestra website here.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E7dsEfEWdbY
  • Brooklyn Band Certain Death Release New Single “Paranoid”

    All American rock band Certain Death released their new flashy single “Paranoid.” The Brooklyn band’s first single of 2024 came out just this past Monday on Aug. 12.

    Paranoid has that amp heavy sound of classic 70’s hair metal. The single features lead singer Henry Black’s vocals and an organic sounding performance with little production. “This song really speaks to the shared experience of overindulgence and paranoia in nightlife that is both repulsive and irresistible,” Black said in a press release. Certain Death was born during the pandemic as a way for Black to confront his difficult feelings in a time of solitude.

    Certain Death has a lot more music to come this fall. Next month they will release another single and they plan to release an LP titled Strange Garden in October.

    It was just last year that the band came into the scene with two singles “When She Ain’t Around” and their very first song “Certain Death.” It was also last year that two new members joined the group- Matt White on Guitar and Jared Schapker on bass. Long-time member CJ Young performs all the heavy rock drums. 

    Not only does the band bring us back to the 70’s with their sound, but they emulate rock heroes with their style and album art. 

    You can listen to “Paranoid” on all streaming services. To keep up with Certain Death you can follow them on Instagram @certaindeathnyc.

  • Judy Collins, The Indigo Girls and Rufus Wainright To Perform At Tanglewood

    Musical legends Judy Collins, The Indigo Girls and Rufus Wainwright will perform together for one night and one night only on Aug. 30 at Tanglewood.

    Collins is a Grammy award winning singer and songwriter who started her career with her debut album A Maid of Constant Sorrow in 1961. She was a huge part of the Greenwich Village Folk movement in the 60’s, a time in music history that inspired other musicians like Joni Mtchel and Leonord Cohen. 

    Not only is she an accomplished musician with 55 albums to her name, but Collins is also an avid social activist and represents UNICEF today. In 2008, a group of contemporary artists released Born to the Breed: A Tribute to Judy Collins. One of those artists was Canadian American singer and songwriter Rufus Wainwright.

    Wainwright was raised in Montreal but later moved to New York City in 1996. Two years later he released his debut studio album Rufus Wainwright. Throughout his career he’s collaborated with other artists such as David Byrne, Joni Mitchell and Mark Ronson. His most recent 2023 album Folkacracy is a record full of folk duets as well as solo pieces exposing Wainwright’s melodic vocals.

    The Indigo Girls, Amy Ray and Emily Saliers, have been performing together since their highschool days. Last summer Greta Gerwig’s Barbie re-popularised their iconic song “Closer to Fine.” Their 2020 album Long Look is a reflection of their careers and childhoods.

    These folk-rock legends will take to the Koussevitzky Music Shed, at the annual concert series Tanglewood located in Western Massachusetts. Tanglewood is the summer residence of the Boston Symphony Orchestra who performs throughout the summer. 
    To buy tickets for the 7 p.m. performance you can visit the website here.

  • The Doobie Brothers Add Four More Tour Dates

    The Doobie Brothers just added four more dates on their 2024 tour in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. On September. 30 and October 1, the Grammy-winners will be in Port Chester, NY at The Capitol Theatre. On Ocobert 4, yhey will stop in Atlantic City at Borgata Event Center, and on the following night they will be in Uncasville, at the Mohegan Sun Arena. All in all, Live Nation added these extra dates to due to the increased demand since the announcement of The Doobie Brothers tour. 

    About The Doobie Brothers

    The Doobie Brothers haven’t stopped performing and making music since their beginning in 1970. Over their career, they have won four Grammy Awards and sold 48 million albums worldwide. In 2020, they were included into the rock and roll hall of fame. Additionally, in 2021 they released their most recent album Liberté and last year they released their single, “Lahaina” in support of those affected by the deadly Maui fires. Moreover, the song featured other musical legends, Mick Fleetwood, Jake Shimabukuro, and Henry Kapono. 

    Their 2024 tour comes three years after the Doobie Brothers 50th anniversary tour that reunited Tom Johnston, Michael McDonald, Pat Simmons, and John McFee for the first time in 25 years. 
    Tickets for the new dates go on sale on Aug 16 at 10 a.m. You can find more information at

    LiveNation.com

    2024 Doobie Brothers Tour

    Thursday, August 29 Denver, CO Ball Arena

    Friday, August 30 Salt Lake City, UT USANA Amphitheater

    Monday, September 2 Macon, GA Macon Centreplex

    Tuesday, September 3 Savannah, GA Enmarket Arena

    Friday, September 6 Simpsonville, SC CCNB Amphitheatre at Heritage Park
    Saturday, September 7 Greensboro, NC White Oak Amphitheatre
    Monday, September 9 Charleston, SC Credit One Stadium

    Monday, September 30 Port Chester, NY Capitol Theatre

    Tuesday, October 1 Port Chester, NY Capitol Theatre

    Friday, October 4 Atlantic City, NJ Borgata Event Center

    Saturday, October 5 Uncasville, CT Mohegan Sun Arena

    Tuesday, October, 8 Atlantic City, NJ Hard Rock Hotel & Casino
    Sunday, October 13 Halifax, NS Scotiabank Centre
    Monday, October 14 Moncton, NB Avenir Centre
    Wednesday, October 16 Ottawa, ON Canadian Tire Centre
    Thursday, October 17 Ottawa, ON Tribute Communities Centre
    Saturday, October 19 St. Catharines, ON Meridian Centre
    Wednesday, October 23 Winnipeg, MB Canada Life Centre
    Thursday, October 24 Edmonton, AB Rogers Place
    Friday, October 25 Calgary, AB Scotiabank Saddledome
    Sunday, October 27 Kelowna, BC Prospera Place
    Monday, October 28 Abbotsford, BC Abbotsford Centre 

  • A New Intimate Venue The Mill Establishes In The Adirondacks

    A new venue in Westport, NY known as The Mill provides a place for live music, visual arts and all-around creative endeavors for the Adirondack community. 

    The Mill westport NY

    The Mill, as suggested by the name, was originally built in 1952 as a grain mill for the Champlain Valley Seed Cooperative. In 2021, the abandoned building was repurchased and in a collaborative effort between creative director Taylor Haskins and local contractors, they rebuilt the building up as a new cultural hub. 

    The listening gallery is described as a cathedral-like room. With its high ceilings and wood paneled walls, the space has great acoustic sounds, but has an intimate feel. Haskins conducts the music programming for The Mill’s listening gallery. He is an accomplished musician himself and has released 11 albums under his name. In 2005, he won a Grammy award for playing lead trumpet on Dave Holland’s jazz album Overtime.

    The Mill also has a place for visual artists to showcase their work at one of the seven galleries that make up Process Art Space curated by Catherine Ross Haskins.

    For visitors looking for a drink and a bite to eat, The Knock is a speakeasy inside the venue that has a sultry 1920’s prohibition aesthetic. The menu of small plates made in house are all created from locally sourced ingredients.

    The Mill has a diverse lineup of musicians for the rest of the summer and into their fall season.

    Coming up on Aug. 16, singer and songwriter Camila Meza will perform her lyrical, latin jazz fusion repertoire. On Aug 23. Haskins will play alongside another accomplished jazz artist, Ben Monder.

    To purchase tickets or to find out more about all The Mill has to offer, you can visit the website here.

    2024 Calendar 

    Aug. 16- Camila Meza

    Aug. 23- Ben Monder and Taylor Haskins

    Aug. 30- Sarah Neufeld

    Sept. 15- Michael Mayo

    Oct. 25- George

  • What’s Next For New Paltz Jam Band, What?

    Horn-rock New Paltz band What? has been part of the DIY scene for more than five years and they continue to rock the Hudson Valley today.

    Who are What?

    With new bands forming every year in New Paltz, What? is a fan favorite in the small college town. Its band members are Dan Steen on guitar, Ryan Perrone on vocals and trombone, Jeremiah Mahoney on bass Alex Endres on drums, Owen Moore on tenor & baritone saxophone, and Jared Nelson on guitar and percussion, They all met at the local university SUNY-New Paltz through the music program. Previously, most members were part of musical groups in their high schools but What? is the first band they’ve been a member of. 

    The band has been operating under the name, What?, since 2016. They released their first album Lavender Lounge in 2020 including some fan favorite songs like “Napkin Party” and “The Cloud.” They confirmed that a sophomore album is in the making which will likely come out early this upcoming year.

    The entire band contributes to their original music, but Perrone does most of the writing. “When I write a song, I really have this band in mind. It’s structured, but it’s always loose because I want everyone to kind of give their voice into the piece,” he told NYS Music.

    Tours

    Although they frequently travel outside of the state, they stay true to their New Paltz beginnings. They got their start playing at bars in New Paltz like Snug Harbor and Bacchus. Whenever they return to these venues, they always pull a packed audience with them. On Aug 23 they will be back in their hometown at a newer bar and restaurant, The Lemon Squeeze. 

    Touring to Portland, Maine and Burlington, Vermont, the band spends a lot of time on the road but sharing their music beyond the bars of New Paltz is something they aspire to continue. Last year What? performed at the iconic Mercury Lounge in NYC and this past March they played at another historic venue, Colony in Woodstock. “That fulfills something in my heart and soul just to be able to go to some random spot in upstate New York with five other fellas,” Steen said.

    Next month, they will be back for more shows in the Hudson Valley like Kingston, NY on Aug 8 as well as Wakefield, RI on Aug 11. You can watch all of their performances on their YouTube channel and keep up with What? through their Instagram here.