Ross Goldstein released his brand new album, Blunders on November 15 on OddCat Records. The nine track, polished LP takes a deep dive into the world of psychedelia and features producer Eric Goulden (Wreckless Eric). This is Goldstein’s fifth full-length record, following his 2021 release Chutes and Ladders.
Artwork by Robert Beatty
Recorded in Catskill, NY at Goulden’s home studio, Blunders was co-produced and engineered by Wreckless Eric. Both Goldstein and Goulden are credited with playing almost every instrument on the record. Despite a morose subject matter, there’s a noticeable warmth that encapsulates Blunders.
Goldstein refers to the LP as “bummer psychedelia” and states that he was “aiming to achieve a cinematic mood and a feeling of being alone and lost on the road in America. Living on the road and feeling lonely and isolated are central themes of the record – attempting to pick up the pieces after relationships fall apart – both accepting and embracing failures.”
Goldstein cites 60’s and 70’s pop, artists like Neil Young, The Beatles, and Grateful Dead as his primary influences as a songwriter. He also references Holland, the 1973 release by The Beach Boys as a major source of inspiration.
Goldstein’s arrangements, eclectic songwriting and heavy use of imagery in his lyrics allow for each song to stand alone – yet they are pieced together in a way that not only establishes his goal of cinematic musicality, but creates a captivating piece of art from Blunders’ first note, to its last. From the country americana, tinged by psychedelia vibes of “My Slippers”, to the dreamy, albeit uneasy soundscapes on tracks like “The Village”, this record has a welcoming yet dark in nature attitude.
His eccentric tones, emotional guitar solos, goosebump inducing textures and production techniques are reminiscent of bands like Pink Floyd and Ween. His use of spoken word on “Carrizozo” and “Ticker Tape”, the funk grooves of “Odd Man Out” and the seemingly not so lyrically serious “I Forgot To Comb My Hair” are just a few examples of how this genre-blending, borderline defying release synthesize under an umbrella of psychedelic folky goodness.
Blunders is currently available on all streaming services – learn more and support Ross Goldstein here.
New York City’s own Joy Buzzer released their debut album, Pleased to Meet You for Wicked Cool Records on October 25th. Recorded in the heart of New York City, the LP boasts 10 tracks that clock in at just over 30 minutes. Pleased to Meet You is defined by the power-pop songwriting of Jed Becker, sending the listener on a blast to the past through a fresh lens.
Formed in 2021, Joy Buzzer is a collaborative project merging the minds of The Lord Calverts and The Doppel Gang. The band consists of Jed Becker and KG Noble on guitars, Nick DeMatteo on bass, Mark Brotter on drums, and Kevin Lydon on lead vocals. This release welcomes the return of Lydon, and features guitarist Askold Buk, who helped produce the record alongside Becker. Half of the record was mixed by Grammy and Emmy award winning mixer, engineer and producer Carl Glanville. The remaining tracks were produced by Eber Pineiro.
Photo by Nancy Adler
Pleased to Meet You is front to back catchy hooks and tasteful lead guitar lines. The band references artists like Fountains of Wayne, XTC, and Todd Rundgren as their source of songwriting inspiration. Tackling themes of introspection and relationships, Joy Buzzer’s arrangements and harmonies showcase their unique voice and individualized perspective, all while staying true to the genre. The musical chemistry between each member is on full display for this release.
Well-crafted synthesizer and guitar solos, alongside memorable choruses fuse rock and pop influence to create the undeniable sound that is Joy Buzzer. When commenting on the album, the band says it’s a “bold, declarative statement of [their] intention to deliver super high-energy songs, with witty lyrics and huge hooks.”
Pleased to Meet You is currently available on all streaming services here. Find out more about Joy Buzzer and support them directly at joybuzzerband.com
In its sixth year, Black Bear Americana Music Fest presented three full days of roots, contemporary and traditional folk, country, blues, bluegrass and mixed-genre solo artists and bands on its main stage, acoustic stage, gazebo stage and workshop stages to an audience that ranged from those of us who are of Woodstock era to kids chasing soap bubbles.
Black Bear ran from Friday, October 11, through Sunday, October 13 at the Goshen Fairgrounds, Goshen, CT.
The Crowd – Victor Wainwright & The Train
The festivals producers, Ian Campbell and Beth Murphy, did a fantastic job and managed to present a festival that brought acts from the unknown to those who needed no introduction.
Although the festival’s first “official” day was Friday, many arrived on Thursday to set up their tent or RV sites. On Thursday night the festival opened, “unofficially”, with the Big Orange Tarp Songwriter Circle, created by Alan Rowoth decades ago in connection with other festivals, and currently presented by Rowoth and singer songwriter Andrew Dunn of CT, who performed at the festival on Sunday.
Andrew Dunn, Hosting Big Orange Tarp
What follows is a quick look at most of the performers at Black Bear. The simultaneous multiplicity of performances on separate stages made full coverage impossible.
Lucas Neil of Saratoga Springs, performing his Americana and indie-folk originals, Glori Wilder of western CT’s R&B and eclectic mix, and Red Smith of Wilmington, DE highly energized originals flavored by influences of country, folk, rock, bluegrass, and soul with vocals that turned on a dime from sweet to gravel and grit, opened the festival on the Acoustic Stage, each with a set of their original songs, in the “Songwriter Showcase”.
Lucas NeilGlori WilderRed Smith
The Midnight Anthem, a group based in CT fronted by three cousins, opened the Main Stage for the day with a set of their country-oriented Americana songs, followed by Burlington, VT’s Tall Travis, an indie folk band with bluegrass folk/punk influences, on the Acoustic State, with one of their two performances for the weekend.
Tall Travis
Over on the Gazebo Stage, Charlie Diamond performed a set of his pop/folk flavored Americana original story type songs with a Dylan-esque type voice that matched his songs perfectly.
Charlie Diamond
Back at the Acoustic Stage, highly regarded Canadian songwriter Scott Cook and Pamela Mae, currently on tour in the US and Canada, performed a set of well-crafted songs, primarily of hope and positive messages, mostly based upon Scott’s life experiences.
Scott Cook and Pamela Mae
Long time folk- favorite New England singer songwriter Cheryl Wheeler, whose songs have been covered by artists as diverse and Garth Brooks and Bette Midler, took the Main Stage where she delivered some long time favorites, as well as some of her newer work.
Cheryl Wheeler
The Rough & Tumble, multi-instrumentalists from New Hampshire, took the Acoustic stage to perform what they describe as their “Dumpster – Folk/Triftstore – Americana” originals for an appreciative crowd.
The Rough and Tumble
The Currys, from Charlottesville, VA , fronted by two brothers and a cousin, played a set of their original indie-folk rock songs with tight vocal harmonies on the Main Stage.
The Currys
Meghan Cary, a Billboard Magazine’s Critic’s Choice Award Winner, performed a beautiful set of her originals from folk rock power ballads to touching songs of hope, backed up on keys by Peter Farrell.
Meghan Cary
Over on the Workshop Stage, Bryan Titus, Marc Apostolides and Shawn Taylor presented songs, stories and photos, from their collective thru-hikes and long-distance hikes on the Appalachian Trail, The Long Trail, The John Muir Trail and the Pacific Crest Trail.
Arm Chair Boogie, a jamgrass/newgrass act from Wisconsin did an excellent performance on the Main Stage which go the crowd to its feet.
Arm Chair Boogie
In addition to performers, there were a number of organizations at Black Bear. “Meals for Music” was an especially compelling organization. It is a non-profit which provides home cooked meals for musicians on the road not only to feed those low on cash, but also for making those on tour feel a bit “at home”…Currently serving the Connecticut area, they are an organization worth looking at.
Meals for Music
The Best Times band performed a set of their original indie rock songs on the Gazebo Stage.
The Best Times
Back across the fields, The Decker Bandits of Collinsville, CT filled the Acoustic Stage with a mix of bluegrass, funk rock/dance originals delivered their own energy to the crowd.
The Decker Bandits
The final act of Friday night was grammy nominated, award winning Victor Wainwright’s Victor Wainwright & The Train, whose piano, electric guitar, horns and rhythm section got the crowd up and moving with their original Americana, blues and wide ranging roots music, with sprinklings of boogie-woogie, honky-tonk, and New Orleans piano.
Victor Wainwright & The Train
Jason Ingriselli & The Miles North opened up Saturday’s performances on the Main Stage showcasing Ingriselli’s powerful voice and songs which he calls New England Country Music.
Jason Ingriselli and The Miles North
Drank The Gold, an Upstate NY based duo brought their soaring vocal harmonies fiddle, guitar/banjo Irish and American old-time and contemporary traditionalist songs to the Acoustic Stage to round out the morning.
Drank The Gold
Kerri Powers bought her original blues and soulful earthy songs on acoustic and resophonic guitars to the Main Stage to an appreciative crowd.
Kerri Powers
Massachusett’s Sean Maqwire, who has fast become one of this writer’s favorite songwriters, brought a handful of his well-crafted songs to the Acoustic Stage.
Sean Magwire
Goodnight Moonshine, a duo, delivered their original folk songs with beautiful vocal harmonies, and an improvisational style and feel more common to jazz than typical folk music.
Goodnight Moonshine
In addition to continuous performances each day on three separate stages, Black Bear presented thirteen different workshops over the three-day festival, including some in songwriting, music production, performance, improv and other music related subjects, all while Main, Acoustic and Gazebo Stage performances continued. This writer took the time to venture over to the Workshop stage mid-afternoon on Saturday to catch workshops on Improv musicianship and songwriting, and then made it back to the Main and Acoustic Stage to see the rest of the performances.
The Slambovian Circus of Dreams, a Central NY based group that has been together for about twenty years, delivered their songs of fantastic stories with a high energy, crowd engaging performance, in what has been called “Woodstock-tinged psychedelia..[with] a hint of southern rock, Celtic and British folk combined with solid songwriting..” that moved the audience and brought it to its feet.
The Slambovian Circus of Dreams
Tall Travis, an indie folk band from Burlington, VT, with its unique bluegrass folk/punk influences, filled the Acoustic stage for the second time over the weekend and lit up the stage with their own brand of musical energy.
Tall Travis
Saturday night’s finale was delivered by Quebec’s Le Vent du Nord who delivered songs and performances of both traditional and original compositions, with highly rhythmic and soulful music, rooted in the Celtic diaspora, enhanced with a broad range of global influences. And when festival producers Ian Campbell and Beth Murphy took the stage before the encore the crowd yelled for the band to be brought back again next year.
Le Vent du Nord
After the stages shut down for the night, those in the know headed for the songwriter circles put on by Big Orange Tarp, Pirates Camp and the Jubilee Jam Tent.
Sunday morning started out with a Main Stage performance by folk legend Vance Gilbert who engaged the audience with a brilliant combination of original songs and banter. Gilbert also offered an excellent performance critique for musicians at the festival at the Workshop stage in the afternoon.
Vance Gilbert
Terra Coda, a band of five percussionists, delivered their unique music to an appreciative crowd, just before the rains came.
Tera Coda
Performers scheduled for later in the day included Ash & Eric, Josh Joplin Group, Two Crows for Comfort, Way Down Wanderers, Shanna In A Dress, Whiskey Talks and Adam Ezra Group.
A truly special component of Black Bear are the songwriter-in-the-round events that feature both featured acts at the festival and other songwriters picked by the various event’s creators or organizers, where a small group of songwriters alternate delivering their songs, solo, for a few rounds, and then the next group comes in, repeating the rounds until the wee hours of the morning. “In the round” events were held each day and night at “The Big Orange Tarp (aka the BOT)”, “Pirate Camp”, the Jubilee Jam Tent. For many, these songwriter circles are a significant part of what makes a festival like Black Bear such a highly respected musical event.
One of these, the “Big Orange Tarp”, or BOT as it’s known by its fans, featured solo performances in the round each night of the festival and into the wee hours of the morning by a number of those who performed at the festival, as well as by other songwriters, including this writer, all handpicked by Rowoth or Dunn. For many, the BOT, and the other in the round songwriter circles, represent one of the most cherished events at this and many other festivals (Kerrville, Falcon Ridge, and more) and represent what many feel is the best way to hear songs, unadorned by stage sound support, performed “in the raw” by the people who wrote them.
Big Orange Tarp, Songwriter Circle
In addition to the fantastic and well curated music and music related workshops for musicians and music lovers, the Black Bear Americana Music Fest provided a varied array of food vendors; workshops in glass making, painting, gel plate printing, pumpkin carving and jewelry making; chili tasting and interactive cocktail making classes; and cannabis related classes from making edibles at home, to growing and harvesting; and the Festival provided AA meetings each morning.
All in all Black Bear was an excellent music festival and one which many will surely attend again next year.
Thank you Ian Campbell and Beth Murphy for a fantastic 2024 Black Bear. See you next year!
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Cheryl WheelerCharlie DiamondBlack Bear Americana Music Festival – 2024Arm Chair BoogieArm Chair Boogie
A walking music legend, Carole King’s roots in New York run deep. Born and raised in Brooklyn, a graduate of Queens College, and lifetime lover of the Manhattan music scene as both an artist and an audience member, New York is an integral part of King’s work and identity at large.
Photo: Jim McCrary, via caroleking.com
Born Carol Joan Klein to Russian and Polish immigrant parents, Carole arrived in the world not too soon after her mother and father had arrived in Brooklyn via Ellis Island. With her father, a radio announcer turned New York City firefighter, and mother, a secretary at a local high school, Carole’s life has been positively steeped in musicality from day one – as well as a deeply ingrained identity as a New York native and lifelong Brooklyn Dodgers fan since youth.
Famously meeting while in an elevator at Brooklyn College, Carole’s father set the precedent for a Klein behind the microphone with his gig as a radio announcer, and her mother’s studies in and passion for english and drama lent themselves to a rather creative upbringing.
Upon her parents’ separation, Carole sought attention and found the answer in the theater. First being introduced to the glittering world of Broadway at just five years old, Carole fell utterly in love, absorbing all of the media and musical projects her mother put on. Her home was rarely quiet, being constantly introduced to shades of music varying from show tunes to Brahms.
Photo via caroleking.com
Finding a unique outlet for emotions of all ranges, King leaned into the theatrics of the stage as she grew up, eventually auditioning for the High School of Performing Arts – now referred to as the Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of the same name. While the audition was not a success, it marked a turning point for Carole as the arts became something of possible professional pursuit more concretely in her mind.
As any teenager of the mid 1950s did, Carole often tuned in to her favorite radio stations. However, unlike many other of her rather sheltered white peers, Carole’s station of preference was Alan Freed’s nightly WINS program. Freed was a lover of artists like the Penguins, the Moonglows, the Clovers, Danny Overbea, La Vern Baker, and BB King – a notably African-American lineup that had many white parents positively beside themselves.
In addition, many tracks played on Freed’s station fell under the umbrellas of rock and roll and R&B, both equally scandalous for their promiscuity and narratives on adversity that were up until then rather absent in the public eye’s musical circuit. This scandal was all the better for an adolescent King, however, who found the new wave of music and its consequent conscious style of creation absolutely mesmerizing
Carole has never been one to shy away from advocating for her beliefs. After moving to Idaho in 1977, she became deeply entrenched in the local ecosystem’s wellbeing and has been an outspoken voice for environmental change ever since.
King would go on to participate in her local Women’s March in 2017, holding a sign that read “One Small Voice.” A single titled with the same phrase would be released the next month, utilizing a thinly-veiled emperor’s new clothes metaphor that encourages listeners to “speak out in honesty.”
While many artists’ relationships with New York City begin on the stage, King’s began in the audience. As a young adult who positively adored the cutting-edge music she was hearing over the radio, being able to attend Freed’s Easter Jubilee at the Brooklyn Paramount in 1955 meant the absolute world and sparked a major bout of motivation.
“Moving farther in, we saw Mickey Baker talking to a couple of the Penguins. At that moment I knew I wanted to mean something to these people. I didn’t want to be one of them. I just wanted them to know who I was and consider me worthy of respect. That ambition existed concurrently and in no way conflicted with my ambition to be an actress.”
– Carole King, A Natural Woman
Auditioning for the High School of Performing Arts once more re-inspired, King enrolled in the fall of 1955 and spent a year studying drama and dance alongside fellow students Al Pacino and Rafael Campos. She would depart the school after a year and return to her classmates at James Madison High School, but Carole would take with her the lessons taught by teachers like Mr. Sachs who inadvertently set her up to arrange vocals through his assignments.
Like many teenagers of the area, King perpetually sought out the liberal arts for peer acceptance and self-expression, the heart of an increasingly viable, ever-vibrant scene only a few subway stops away. 1957 marked a time of escapades up and down Bleecker Street and throughout the coffee shops and venues of Greenwich Village with her peers.
After a rare successful infiltration of the Vanguard, Carole King witnessed mind-blowing jazz sets and sat listening to the music while her peers smoked. By default she became the one picking out the records, and that quickly became much more interesting to Carole than the smoking.
After a nudge in the direction of her high school’s annual Sing by her mother, King wrote, arranged, and performed a piece for the first time to a large audience, and the response of her peers in the audience shifted something within her. She soon began to compose in earnest, arranging pieces for the chorus class before turning the passion into a full-on street corner harmony gig. Recruiting three other peers to be the soprano, tenor, and bass to her alto, the group dubbed themselves the Cosines and performed for free at school events and dances.
Photo via caroleking.com
This would mark the beginning of a career in arranging both for a group and for herself, developing a process she would keep well into her career as she wrote for or in collaboration with the likes of Bobby Vee, The Everly Brothers, The Monkees, Aretha Franklin, James Taylor, Mariah Carey, and countless others across the industry.
After deciding to pursue songwriting in earnest, Carole chased down a so-called “Atlantic Records” that Freed had mentioned on his radio station, quickly presenting her work to an executive and landing her first recording contract.
Graduating high school at just sixteen years old, King entered Queens College with little enthusiasm after an unexpected move to Rosedale had uprooted her plans to attend her parents’ alma mater. Just around the corner, however, were fellow freshmen and musical peers Art Garfunkel and Paul Simon, the latter becoming a quick friend and collaborator.
Also at Queens College was Carole King’s future songwriting partner and husband of many years Gerry Goffin. While she first thought they’d never see eye to eye on music – he was very open with his hatred for Rock and Roll – his pitch to collaborate on a song quickly became history. Married at her parents’ home in Rosedale in 1959, Carole and Gerry moved into a one-bedroom apartment on Bedford Avenue, only a block away from her childhood home.
Photo via caroleking.com
Gerry, a chemist in downtown Brooklyn, and Carole, a secretary for a chimney manufacturer in Manhattan, were determined to see their passion for songwriting through and, upon an interaction with Neil Sedaka on the sidewalk of Broadway, the two landed a three-year writing deal that brought the couple out of debt and into a two-bedroom apartment on Brown Street in Brooklyn, an area that had been nothing but corn fields when King was a child.
Working in the highly competitive cubicle space that was Aldon, Gerry and Carole managed their first major hit with “Will You Love Me Tomorrow.” Gerry stepped away from his traditional job and the couple moved into the suburbs of West Orange, New Jersey to raise their second daughter, which is where they would reside together for a number of years before the marriage began to crumble.
When Goffin decided to move to California on his own, King was torn between the vibrancy of what she dubbed “the coolest place she knew” and California, where their children would be able to see their father. Ultimately putting her children before herself, Carole switched Coasts.
Photo via caroleking.com
1970 marked a second beginning for King, who would be brought back to New York and into the spotlight by friend and collaborator James Taylor during his tour. Just prior to their show at Carole’s alma mater Queens College, Taylor requested she sing the lead for “Up on the Roof” to King’s immediate horror and dismay. Terrified about stepping out of the comfortable zone that was just “James’ pianist,” Carole took a breath and performed, receiving raucous applause.
“Up on the Roof” would return in 1971 at King’s first ever performance as a solo act in front of an audience during the now famed June evening at Carnegie Hall. Recorded and later immortalized in a seventeen-track album, the concert featured some of Carole’s first works alongside duets with Taylor for “Up on the Roof”, “Will You Love Me Tomorrow?”, and “You’ve Got a Friend.”
With the turn of the new year came Carole’s 30th birthday, a whopping four GRAMMY wins for her work in Tapestry, and the arrival of her fourth child. The following year, King returned to New York City to deliver a first-of-its-kind Central Park show completely free to the public, a rather poetic homecoming of an estimated 100,000+ attendees.
Recorded and released first as a live album and then a fully-fledged concert documentary in 2023, the Central Park concert remains a sparkling snapshot of King’s commercial and critical peak . Though this level of fame did not come without its drawbacks, with Carole detailing a frenzied crowd of fans crowding her limo after the show in her memoir.
Such situations and the general all-encompassing business that had become her life drew King to the quieter lifestyle of Idaho, though the draw of New York’s creative vibrancy never quite lost her. She would travel back to the city frequently to visit family, friends, and other artists she enjoyed working alongside.
An extended return to New York wouldn’t come into Carole King’s life until she was cast in Hindi Brooks’ A Minor Incident at the West Bank Café Theater in 1987. Performing alongside Paull Hipp who she had met when he was producing the off-Broadway Rockabilly Road, Carole frequently tagged along to Brooks’ recurring gig at the Red Lion Café on Bleecker.
Quietly playing guitar for his sets, she noted that very few would recognize her in their preoccupation with chatting, dining, or drinking, but there were always a few who would glance back and forth at her, nudging their friends with knowing smiles.
Photo: Annie Liebovitz, via caroleking.com
It wouldn’t be until Carole attended Bruce Springsteen’s 1988 Tunnel of Love show at Madison Square Garden that the creative spark would return in full, and her sense of dejection at missing the on-stage magic quickly became determination as she brushed up her latest tracks, re-signed with Capitol Records, and recorded City Streets at Skyline Studios.
Among the tracks developed in this era is “Friday’s Tie-Die Nightmare” that tells the tale of a dream Carole had experienced related to the City’s subway system, at which point in her memoir she takes a moment to impart some subway wisdom: “Subway Lesson 1: when the subway runs smoothly, as it does most of the time, it’s the most efficient and affordable method of getting around New York City, and Subway Lesson 2: the only way to catch an express is to leave early enough to make the entire trip on a local.”
Reminiscing about people-watching and considering her own observations of others, King explains that her third subway lesson is not a sentence – it’s a song. Written upon her realization that the way she perceived the people around her was ultimately a reflection of how she was feeling at the moment, subway lesson three comes in the form of the track “Beautiful” – “You’re gonna find, yes you will, that you’re beautiful as you feel.”
Alongside her return to performance came roles as a teacher in the ABC After-School Special It’s only Rock & Roll shot in Pine Bush, New York and Willy Russell’s Broadway production of Blood Brothers on a ten-month run.
Photo via caroleking.com
While not the star in the most literal sense, Broadway returned to King’s life in 2013 with the previews and eventual debut of Beautiful: The Carole King Musical on January 12, 2014. Exploring her early life and rise to stardom alongside Goffin, the show became the 27th longest running show in Broadway history upon its closure in October of 2019 with a stunning 60 previews and 2,418 shows logged.
Despite not playing herself as the titular role, Carole made a handful of appearances at the Stephen Sondheim Theatre during the show’s run first to surprise lead actress Melissa Benoist in a reprise of “I Feel the Earth Move,” and then to celebrate the production’s fifth anniversary, making appearances during “Beautiful” and the show’s finale.
Beautiful: The Carole King Musical gained endless critical acclaim and won several awards, including two Tonys and a Grammy. A testament to New York’s love for Carole King as a story, an artist, and a human being, the musical immortalizes above all the timeless nature of her work, both honoring and reviving King’s most famous works for a new generation of lifelong fans.
An artist, an advocate, a deft songwriter, a mother, and above all an admirable woman who has pursued nothing less than fulfillment throughout her entire life, King’s legacy is a shining one felt throughout each and every nook and cranny of New York.
The whimsical singer-songwriter AURORA graced the stage of the Beacon Theatre for two nights amid her sold out What Happened to the Heart? world tour.
If you’re in search of an act straight from a storybook, look no further than AURORA. With a signature sound akin to a woodland fairytale, a voice that positively twinkles, and whimsical yet cutting lyricism, AURORA revels in the magical and channels the mystical in every sense of the words.
Born and raised in Norway, Aurora Aksnes exists within an ethereal sonic sphere entirely of her own. Beginning her songwriting and dance journeys at the age of six, creation is in her blood.
A self described “forest person,” AURORA has compared her home place of Drange to Narnia, spending her time in her home when not spent adventuring through the woods.
Releasing her fifth album What Happened to the Heart? in June of this year, AURORA’s most recent release and its subsequent headlining tour stems from a letter co-written by indigenous activists titled “We Are The Earth” which described the earth as “the heart that pulsates within us,” creating the inspiration for the album’s core concept.
Announced alongside the album was the What Happened to the Heart? world tour, which has and will continue to take AURORA throughout Europe, the United States, and South America- including a date at Manhattan’s own Beacon Theatre, which was soon expanded into a two-show run for its impressive demand.
Before the show even began, the Beacon Theatre was positively teeming with excitement. Folks were dressed in everything from band tees to ball gowns, couples were wandering the packed foyer excitedly pointing towards the merchandise table, and children were gasping in awe of the theater’s grandeur atop parents’ shoulders.
With opening support by neo-soul and hip hop artist Biig Piig, the evening’s festivities were off to a wonderfully mesmerizing start as she encouraged audience members to stand up and dance if they so wished in between tracks like the wonderfully smooth “Roses and Gold” and the hard hitting “Decimal” that had light production for days.
Prior to AURORA’s exciting step on stage, the lights dimmed to allow a nostalgically hazy projection begin to play. The excitement was palpable, but fans kept sound to an absolute hush to experience the visual to its fullest extent before she twirled her way on stage to an explosion of cheers.
Delivering a hauntingly magical performance of “Church Yard” and “Soulless Creatures,” AURORA’s main support was a small set of other vocalists that turned the theatre into an echo chamber.
With a full set list of 21 tracks, AURORA’s musicality and vibrancy both vocally and in her stage presence was on full display paired with the Theatre’s groundbreaking new Sphere Immersive Sound system.
Dazzling fans for the second night in a row with her shimmering voice, dazzling spins and leaps, and effortless sense of musical presence, AURORA made the New York dates of her What Happened to the Heart? tour ones to remember.
AURORA – Beacon Theatre – Friday, December 6, 2024
Canadian-born Avril Lavigne is the pop-punk singer-songwriter credited for paving the way for the female-driven pop punk music that became synonymous with the early 2000s.
Ushering in the era with her “Pop-Punk Queen” moniker and skater style with her debut studio album Let Go, Lavigne quickly rose to stardom with hits such as “Complicated” and “Sk8er Boi,” charting at the top of the Billboard 200 with her first ever release.
Since then, Lavigne has released six albums, each to critical acclaim. In addition to her traditional successes, Countless artists from punk to indie rock to emo hip hop have named Lavigne as a major inspiration or influence, creating a legacy extending well beyond herself.
Avril also earned a Guinness World Record for being the youngest female solo artist to top the UK chart and saw the success of her hit “Girlfriend” emerge as the first music video to reach 100 million views on YouTube just four years after the website’s creation.
Originally announced at the beginning of the year, Lavigne has spent the majority of 2024 performing her Greatest Hits Tour across the globe.
Supporting the tour will be special guests Fefe Dobson, Simple Plan, and We The Kings- the latter two of which will perform during all New York Dates.
Avril Lavigne will grace the stages of four venues in New York, with shows in Saratoga Springs on May 27, Syracuse on May 28, Manhattan on May 30, and Bethel Woods on June 27. The full list of dates and venues is below.
For more information on the Greatest Hits Tour and all things Avril Lavigne, be sure to visit her official website here.
AVRIL LAVIGNE: THE GREATEST HITS 2025 TOUR DATES:
Sun May 18 – Moncton, NB – Avenir Centre
Tue May 20 – Halifax, NS – Scotiabank Centre
Sun May 25 – Bangor, ME – Maine Savings Amphitheatre
Tue May 27 – Saratoga Springs, NY – Broadview Stage at SPAC
Wed May 28 – Syracuse, NY – Empower Federal Credit Union Amphitheater
Fri May 30 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden
Tue Jun 03 – London, ON – Canada Life Place
Thu Jun 05 – Niagara Falls, ON – Fallsview Casino Resort
Sat Jun 07 – Hershey, PA – Hersheypark Stadium
Sun Jun 08 – Cincinnati, OH – Riverbend Music Center
Tue Jun 10 – Noblesville, IN – Ruoff Music Center
Thu Jun 12 – St. Louis, MO – Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre – St. Louis
Tue Jun 17 – Raleigh, NC – Coastal Credit Union Music Park
Wed Jun 18 – Charleston, SC – Credit One Stadium
Fri Jun 20 – Tampa, FL – MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre
Sat Jun 21 – Hollywood, FL – Hard Rock Live at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino
Mon Jun 23 – Jacksonville, FL – Daily’s Place
Thu Jun 26 – Burgettstown, PA – The Pavilion at Star Lake
Fri Jun 27 – Bethel, NY – Bethel Woods Center for the Arts
Sun Jun 29 – Burls Creek, ON – Burl’s Creek Event Grounds~ (visit AllYourFriendsFestival.com for ticket details)
Sat Oct 18 – Las Vegas, NV – Las Vegas Festival Grounds~ (visit WhenWeWereYoungFestival.com for more info)
The date Dec. 8, 1980 will be remembered infamously throughout history as the night John Lennon was shot outside his New York City apartment. The Beatles member and songwriter was returning home from the Record Plant recording studio with his wife Yoko Ono, fresh off their recently released collaborative album, Double Fantasy, when tragedy struck.
Left: John Lennon, Right: Christine Lavin – photos via CNN and Fleming Artists
Lennon was shot four times in the back and was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital. Fans mourned his death afterwards gathering outside The Dakota, the apartment building where he lived and outside of which he was killed.
Double Fantasy, album by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, released 1980
Four years later, Lennon’s tragic murder was recalled by Christine Lavin, a long-time folk singer-songwriter and guitarist in her song, aptly titled “The Dakota.”
Newspaper headline in Liverpool Photo, Dec. 9th, 1980 via rarenewspapers.com
The song is the final track on her 13 song, self-produced album, Future Fossils, released in 1984. “The Dakota” was actually written a year or two following Lennon’s death, the song inspired by Lavin being stuck in rush hour traffic in NYC as “Imagine” happened to play on the taxi radio.
Album art for Fossil Fuels by Christine Lavin, released 1984
Lavin never actually mentions Lennon by name in the song, alluding to his death primarily through her imagery of the events that unfolded outside of the Dakota. Lavin spent much of her professional career playing venues in New York City and lived only a few blocks away from the Dakota at the time Lennon was killed.
To see one of her musical idols, murdered in a city she called home, was shocking she said in an interview with NYS Music. “That night is burned into my memory,” she said. “To this, day I can’t walk near the scene of the crime without thinking about it.”
In her song, the building serves as an unmoving reminder of that horrific night, a symbol of senseless death that is difficult to escape.
John Lennon and Yoko Ono outside the Dakota – Photo via Getty Images
The chorus finds herself reflecting on the night of Lennon’s death with soft emotion and heartbreak as Lavin sings:
“Every time I see the Dakota, I think about that night. Shots ringing out, the angry shouts, A man losing his life.”
“The Dakota” – Christine Lavin
The closest Lavin comes to referencing Lennon himself is by quoting one of his most popular and enduring songs, “Imagine.” In a unique twist however, Lavin takes the familiar, hopeful tune and bitterly exposes the unrealistic idyllic world, Lennon so vividly painted.
I don’t believe in coincidence So why then on the radio Did an old familiar voice Echo back from not so long ago? “Imagine all the people Living life in peace.” Well, it’s hard to do When you are on this blood-stained street.
“The Dakota” – Christine Lavin
Lavin’s grief and anger over the famed singer’s unnecessary death reaches its peak at this point, the bridge and climax of the song. The lyrics play out like a conversation with herself, as a harmony of voices sing Lennon’s famed lines, and Lavin replies with her honest answer.
Album art for Imagine by John Lennon
“It was just the way I felt at the time,” Lavin explained. “Imagine is so optimistic but it’s almost too optimistic in ways when we think of how the world is today. And it is harder to [be optimistic] when your on that street because to think the man that wrote those lines had such a tragic and violent end doesn’t make sense. Its such a contradiction.”
Still, Lavin said she tries to use her power as a songwriter to find a glimmer of light in a dark situation.
“As songwriters anything we can right that can help us to overcome the dark side of our nature I think we owe to the world,” she said. “It’s acknowledging the world we live in, but knowing we can do better and that it is our duty to do better.”
Lavin said the decision not to mention Lennon’s name in the song was purposeful – she didn’t want to look like she was exploiting the situation. Quite the contrary, Yoko One ended up publishing Lavin’s lyrics in a book she edited about John Lennon.
Memories of John Lennon by Yoko Ono, the book Lavin’s song is featured in
As the song continues, Lavin reflects further on her anger, asking for peace of mind.
I wish I had the answer To the simple question, ‘Why?’ … I wish I could take these bitter thoughts And just shake them from my mind
“The Dakota” Christine Lavin
In what would be Lennon’s last interview before his death, he talked with a crew from RKO Radio in his home in the Dakota. Eerily enough, at one point during the conversation, Lennon pondered themes of death and getting older.
“When we were kids, 30 was death, right?” he said. “I’m 40 now and I feel just … I feel better than before.” He later added, “I consider that my work won’t be finished until I’m dead and buried and I hope that’s a long, long time.”
The Dakota as seen from Central Park West – Photo via Wikipedia
Even in 2022, memories of Lennon’s death haunt the state of New York. Although, The Dakota has undergone extensive renovations, it still maintains its signature gothic architecture and remains home to numerous celebrities, thanks to its prime location facing Central Park.
Lennon’s killer, now 67, also lives, albeit behind bars at the Green Haven Correctional Facility in New York. Just this September, he was denied parole for the 12th time. Yoko Ono, has historically sent a letter to the parole board every two years to request her husband’s murderer remain in prison, CNN reported.
Despite the painful reminders, Lennon’s legacy and hope for a better world persists long after his death as well.
An annual tribute concert is held in Lennon’s name in NYC bringing together famous musicians and celebrities in a night of song and remembrance. Proceeds also go to supporting songwriting programs in elementary schools. One selected artist is also awarded with the John Lennon Real Love Award, this year given to Joan Osborne.
Joan Osborne to receive this years John Lennon Real Love Award
Lavin’s final lyrics capture the conflicting emotions around wanting to forget the tragedy but remember Lennon’s greatness as she closes out the chorus singing:
“Well, it’s something we shouldn’t dwell upon But it’s something we shouldn’t ignore Too many good men have been cut down Let’s pray there won’t be any more.”
“The Dakota” – Christine Lavin
John Lennon is memorialized in “Strawberry Fields,” a section of Central Park across the street from the Dakota that Yoko Ono landscaped in honor of her husband.
Syracuse-based multi-instrumentalist and singer-songwriter Jess Novak has announced her newest release WOMAN, slated for December.
With a sharp electric fiddle, impactful vocals, and an enrapturing sound, Jess Novak is a musical force to be reckoned with. Having performed on stages from California to the likes of New York City’s own The Cutting Room in solo, duo, or band formation, Novak has played over 150 shows each year and has an impressive count of twelve original album releases under her belt- and a published book to boot.
In addition to her own musical endeavors, Novak is the founder and presenter of the F.I.R.E. Festival, an acronym for females inspire, rock, empower. Hosted for the first time in 2022, the annual F.I.R.E. festival continues to highlight and empower female artists, musicians, and business owners across the industry.
Returning for her 13th release since debuting as an artist in 2013, Jess has announced the WOMAN EP slated for release this December. A call to action for women as well as a celebration of those who take a stand in the face of seemingly daunting odds, WOMAN will feature two original songs in addition to a surprise cover of a Taylor Swift track.
Made in partnership with the producer and engineer behind her last EP Sonrise, Justin Spaulding, WOMAN is a promising fan to the already burning flame that is female empowerment.
“I felt like I needed to capture the spirit of the [F.I.R.E. Festival] in a song, specifically combining the words ‘fire’ and ‘woman.’ I did in this song, but didn’t expect the timing to be so meaningful. I want to give faith and inspiration to women who are standing up for themselves and others all the time.”
– Jess Novak
Jess Novak has also teased a music video publication coinciding with the release of WOMAN. While no further information is available on this exciting development, you can keep up to date on all of the latest updates on WOMAN and beyond on Jess’ official website here.
Avant-pop superstar Charli XCX has announced the “Brat 2025” Arena Tour which currently consists of five dates, two of which see Barclays Center in Brooklyn.
Pop and electronic superstar Charli xcx has become an iconic figure in the arts, having helped expand the landscape of popular music over the last decade by seamlessly traversing the underground and mainstream with her artistic output. Over the course of a trailblazing career, the multi-hyphenate creative has earned critical acclaim for her innovative style and entrepreneurial spirit and seen her forward-thinking approach reshape pop culture in the process.
She released her sixth studio album ‘BRAT’ in June which stands as the most critically acclaimed album of the year and landed at Number 1 on the UK Official Album Chart in October. ‘BRAT’ has well and truly made its mark on the cultural zeitgeist this year; the audacious campaign has seen Charli cause roadblocks around the world with her pop-up ‘PARTYGIRL’ DJ sets, break the internet with viral videos and surprise collaborations with the likes of Billie Eilish, Lorde, Addison Rae, Robyn, Yung Lean, Julia Fox, Chloë Sevigny, and Rachel Sennott and introduce a new tone of green to the social lexicon.
The album was nominated for the Mercury Prize 2024 while ‘Guess featuring Billie Eilish’ debuted at Number 1 on the UK Official Singles Chart, making Charli the first British artist to land at the top of the charts this year. In October, Charli followed it up with ‘Brat and it’s completely different but also still brat’ – a brand-new version of the critically acclaimed album featuring reimagined takes and innovative reworks of tracks from ‘BRAT’ featuring the likes of Julian Casablancas, Bon Iver, The 1975, Shygirl, Ariana Grande, Caroline Polachek and more.
The “Brat 2025” Arena Tour kicks off on April 22 at Moody Center in Austin, TX. The tour then wraps up on April 30 and May 1 with two iconic shows at Brooklyn’s famous Barclays Center.
CHARLI XCX – BRAT 2025 – ARENA TOUR:
April 22 – Austin, TX – Moody Center
April 26 – Minneapolis, MN – Target Center
April 28 – Rosemont, IL – Allstate Arena
April 30 – Brooklyn, NY – Barclays Center
May 1 – Brooklyn, NY – Barclays Center
For more information on Charli XCX’s “Brat 2025” Arena Tour and to purchase tickets, click here.
Singer-songwriter Robert Mathes has announced the 2024 dates of his time-honored Annual Holiday Concert in Purchase.
Celebrated as an Emmy-winning and Grammy-nominated arranger, producer, director, and musician, Robert Mathes is renowned for his craft. Working with the likes of Lady Gaga, Bruce Springsteen, Aretha Franklin, Elton John, Fall Out Boy, Rufus Wainwright, Rascal Flatts, and countless others, Mathes‘ repertoire is certainly one to admire.
In addition, Mathes’ achievements this past year include a series of symphonic concerts with Sting in collaboration with the Philadelphia Orchestra, The San Francisco Symphony, and the Florida Orchestra. He also produced Melissa Errico’s Sondheim in the City album, musically directed both the MusiCares Artist of the Year event honoring Bon Jovi and the Songwriters Hall of Fame Awards.
Even with all of these achievements under his belt for 2024, Mathes isn’t done quite yet- his annual Rob Mathes Holiday Concert will return for three nights at The Performing Arts Center at Purchase College.
A blend of Mathes’ introspective singer-songwriter pop, jazz and blue overtones, and holiday classics alongside some Rob Mathes originals, his annual shows are beloved for their unique takes on the holiday tradition.
Photo: Evoto
Accompanied by Will Lee on bass, Billy Masters on guitar, Gunnar Olson on drums, Rick Knutsen on keyboard, and a myriad of horns by Jeff Kievit, Tony Kadleck, Andy Snitzer, Aaron Helk, Mike Davis, and Jeff Nelson, the three nights of holiday cheer are sure to be unforgettable. In addition, R&B singers James “D Train” Williams and Vaneese Thomas will grace the stage before the show’s concluding fan-favorite “Choir of Saints & Friends”.
In addition to the holiday cheer, the Holiday Concert will once more be an event for the greater good. For the fourth consecutive year, Mathes’ holiday shows will benefit Food Rescue US of Fairfield County, an organization dedicated to eliminating hunger and food waste. Food Rescue US is offering exclusive VIP tickets with a donation of $150- for more information on this opportunity for good, visit their website here.
Rob Mathes and his band will grace the Performing Arts Center of Purchase College for three nights on December 20, 21, and 22. Tickets are available now on the PAC’s official box office page.
To learn more about Rob Mathes, check out his latest work, and keep an eye out for his future endeavors, be sure to visit his official website here.