Category: Brooklyn

  • Brooklyn’s D.I.Y. Rock Scene of 1980s to be the Subject of Forthcoming Documentary

    When it comes to NYC’s D.I.Y. rock scenes and their club catalysts, CBGB wasn’t the only game in town. In the late 1980s, when the now uber-glitzy and fully gentrified borough of Brooklyn was still mostly grit, grime and crime, there was one incredibly unassuming dive bar on the fringes of Park Slope where a handful of bands built a scene that captured the attention of the indie rock world. 

    Now this bar and the many bands it birthed are set to be the subject of an in-the-works documentary, Before It Was Cool: The Brooklyn Beat from Lauterbach’s, with an online crowdfunding campaign and reunion concert set for September 14.

    Several years in the making, the nearly completed film is the passion project of three people who knew the scene best. Executive producer and director Michael West was there from the beginning, as a member of The Original Rays.  Today a DJ and music director at Radio Free Brooklyn, Rachel Cleary stumbled into this seedy venue when she went to see her boyfriend’s band play and was floored by what she heard but saw in the way of the unforgettable characters who were habitues of the bar. A Brooklyn native, Cleary is a producer and the on-screen interviewer who relates the tale through interviews with several dozen musicians and fans who religiously frequented the venue. Another Brooklyn musician who emerged a decade later, Jeannie Fry of the band My Little Eye, also serves as a Producer and Technical Advisor for the project.

    Lauterbach’s had a direct connection to CBGB’s. It all began in 1988 when Bob Racioppo, a former member of one of the original CBGB bands, The Shirts, walked into his neighborhood bar after a shift as a cab driver. In a 2023 interview with the Red Hook Star, Racioppo said: “It had a small stage and looked just like a mini-CBGB’s. It also had a pool table, just like the original CBGB’s. And in those days, the neighborhood was white and Puerto Rican working class, not yet upscale and gentrified.”  Housed on the ground floor of a two-story building on an otherwise residential block, Lauterbach’s was a true curiosity in the early days of Park Slope’s gentrification.

    With the blessing of the owners who lived upstairs, George and Alice Lauterbach, Racioppo began to bring in bands. “I brought in money and knew how to treat bands, so it took off right away.” The club soon began to attract aspiring bands from the borough and beyond.

    These D.I.Y-minded bands weren’t content to just play; they began issuing a series of self-financed compilation CDs, starting with 1988’s Today Brooklyn, Tomorrow The World.  Bearing the works of up to 20 bands in each CD, these compilations garnered national buzz, including radio airplay from popular stations like K-Rock and WNEW-FM and feature stories in outlets including The New York Times.

    This down-and-dirty but big-hearted scene is coming to life via in-person interviews with well over two dozen musicians and the locals who made this downscale tavern a must-stop every weekend. All totaled, there is 60 hours of footage being culled for the project including many archival performances taped at Lauterbach’s and at Brooklyn Beat events at other venues including CBGB.

    While artists including Joan Osborne and They Might Be Giants graced the stage in their early days, this film focuses on the bands who were the heart of the scene, with some musicians who have continued to perform professionally and others for whom their glory days in music are a cherished memory.  Interviewees include members of Racioppo’s band, Chemical Wedding, The Fields, Frank’s Museum, Formaldehyde Blues Train, Al Lee Wyer, The Moe, Squirrels from Hell and more.

    While much of the film is in the can, the producers are launching a campaign to secure completion funds for the film. They will use the monies to finalize its editing and to promote the documentary at leading film festivals in 2025. 

    The crowdfunding effort, housed at gofund.me/38eb3334, will be kicked off with an event on Saturday, September 14 at 8 pm at Young Ethel’s at 506 5th Avenue, South Slope, Brooklyn.  The event will feature performances by reunited Brooklyn Beat bands including Kenny Young and the Eggplants, Squirrels from Hell, Chemical Wedding, Medicine Sunday, Frank’s Museum and Hari Karaoke Trio of Doom.  Info at youngethels.com  (Ed. note: This writer was a member of the latter two bands in the lineup).

    “This film has come together much like the Brooklyn Beat scene itself,” begins West, “with a group of artists collaborating to create something more beautiful than any could’ve imagined or created on their own. This team, the interviewees and the subject matter have put us well on the road to producing a high-quality documentary about a fondly remembered corner of New York City’s rock history.”

    Rachel Cleary adds: “Trying something new can redirect the trajectory of a person’s life. In our interviews, people spoke about breaking their routine to go into Lauterbach’s and that it led to their lives taking a completely different course, for the better. I hope people will leave this film with an appreciation for the power and importance of community, shared experience, and especially music made for the love of it. The Brooklyn Beat crew is a family that lived and continues to thrive well beyond the walls of a bar.”

  • Brooklyn Bowl 15th Anniversary To Be Celebrated with Lettuce

    Williamsburg, Brooklyn’s combination concert venue, bowling alley, bar and restaurant, Brooklyn Bowl, has announced a two-night celebration for their 15th anniversary, hosting GRAMMY Award-nominated, six-piece, funky music collective Lettuce on Saturday, September 28 and Sunday, September 29.

    Brooklyn Bowl 15th anniversary

    An NYC landmark, Brooklyn Bowl’s blend of live music, bowling, and exceptional cuisine has become a cornerstone of NYC’s nightlife over the last 15 years. Located in a historic 19th-century Hecla Iron Works building, Brooklyn Bowl was the first venue to bring together live music and 16 lanes of bowling in New York City, and with the great success replicated around the country, with locations in Nashville, Philadelphia and Las Vegas.

    The venue has hosted over 5,000 shows to date, including performances from musical legends like Questlove, M.I.A., Snoop Dogg, Lauryn Hill and Childish Gambino. Beyonce, Lorde, Neil Patrick Harris, Spike Lee, Bill De Blasio, former President Bill Clinton and members of the Brooklyn Nets have also all attended Brooklyn Bowl as special guests, in addition to the over 350,000 guests who attend annually.

    Brooklyn Bowl 15th anniversary

    The venue also boasts food by the Blue Ribbon restaurant group—famous for its finger-licking fried chicken—and serves locally crafted beers, many of which are from Brooklyn Brewery, located right next door.

    With countless accolades, like being named Zagat’s “Best Music Club” three years in a row, being nominated for “Nightclub of the Year” by Pollstar and as one of the best restaurants in NYC by Trip Expert, Brooklyn Bowl has cemented its status as one of the best all-in-one concert, food and entertainment destinations in New York, something that Lettuce will be celebrating this September.

    Buy tickets for Brooklyn Bowl’s 15th anniversary or any of their other shows here.

  • Brooklyn Duo Rubblebucket Release Funky New Single “Rattlesnake”

    On July 10, Brooklyn-based art-pop duo Rubblebucket released their newest single, “Rattlesnake,” along with its corresponding music video. Filled with groovy basslines, punchy brass and saxophone riffs, and hard-hitting lyrics in a deceptively cool and catchy tone, “Rattlesnake” is the newest edition to a laundry list of funky tunes sure to make your hips move.

    rubblebucket

    Based on lead singer Klamia Traver’s own struggles with mental health and anxiety, the lyrics to “Rattlesnake” present a situation that almost everyone can relate to. The band loosely adapted a poem Kalmia wrote called “Time For the Rattlesnake” from her poetry book Year of The Banana. The poem recalls an encounter Traver had with the animal, jokingly saying, “The beauty of it took my breath away. But I later ruminated about how even when I am faced with the most breathtaking of our planet’s offerings, it can still be very hard to be present, focused & relaxed because of the chronic anxiety from which I suffer.”

    The song opens with, “I don’t want to analyze you / But it seems you’re stuck in a cage / Let the child inside drive you / You’ve got what it takes.” Rattlesnake, in this instance, acts as a metaphor for someone so coiled and wrapped up in their own worries, fears, and anxieties that they prevent themselves from chasing new opportunities and ideas, even if it is something their “inner child” so desperately craved. The bridge’s lyrics further implement this idea, this time bringing the perspectives of outsiders into it: “Sometimes you gotta kill your idols / Psychedelic cage / In the footsteps of our mothers / We make the same mistakes.”  

    rattlesnake rubblebucket

    With such an intense undertone, looking at the lyrics alone makes the tune sound morose and dark. But instead, nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, the song is almost deceptively catchy. The groovy bassline, provided by the band’s other half, Alex Toth, nearly makes you forget about the unsettling lyrics. Renata Zieguer’s strings certainly add another unique element to the instrumentation, bringing a classic ’70s-style disco charm. Kalmia Traver’s light, soothing vocals almost make you forget about the fears the song forces you to face. The band went full disco-funk with “Rattlesnake”, producing a track that sounds like Bee Gees and Michael Jackson meets Stereolab.

    For Rubblebucket, therapy takes the form of a dance party. “Rattlesnake” is a refreshing, funky tune that certainly stands out with its creative sound, and even more creative music video, reminiscent of something we would’ve seen from Talking Heads. The message here is clear: uncoil yourself like a rattlesnake, but dance while you do it.

    “Rattlesnake” is out now and available on all streaming platforms and be sure to catch Rubblebucket at their announced live shows for 2024, one in Washington and one in New Hampshire.

    Find tickets and more info HERE.

    Rubblebucket Live

    July 13 – Seattle, WA – Ballard Seafood Festival
    October 19 – Concord, NH – Concord Sound & Color Festival

  • Frank Black Announces Teenager Of The Year Anniversary Tour

    Frank Black announced his “Teenager Of The Year” tour Jan 15 through Feb 6, and on Feb 1, Black and his band will perform at Brooklyn Steel.

    Black made the announcement through Brooklyn Vegan, a NYC based music blog. Teenager Of The Year is Black’s second studio album and was released 30 years ago under 4AD records. The classic alternative rock album was released a year after Black’s former band, The Pixies split up. 

    Eric Drew Feldman, who had previously played Keyboard on one of the Pixies tours, co-produced the album. The album also features Joey Santiago on guitar, a founding member of The Pixies. Teenager was originally not well received by fans but is now considered one of the greatest alternative rock albums and made it onto Pitchfork’s top 100 albums of the 1990s.

    College roommates, Santiago and Black formed The Pixies in 1986 after dropping out of The University Massachusetts Amherst. After a few years of conflict between the members, the band officially split in 1993. Before Teenager, Black released his first self-titled album in 1992. In 1997 he formed his band, Frank Black and The Catholics and the band recorded music throughout the early 2000’s.

    The Teenager Of the Year tour will include Feldman, Lyle Workman and Nick Vincent who originally appeared on the album.

    Tickets for the tour go on sale on July 19 and on Black’s Website here.

  • Pink Talking Fish Announce 2024 Tour With Five Shows in New York

    Pink Talking Fish – the Pink Floyd, Talking Heads and Phish tribute fusion act – has announced a huge fall tour running all the way into December, with five stops in New York State. Along with last month’s New Year’s Run announcement, the rest of 2024 is mapped out for the hybrid phenomenon.

    Known for their mind-blowing live performances, the three-act tribute band Pink Talking Fish has announced a two-leg tour, with stops in Lafayette, Lake George, Tarrytown, Buffalo and Brooklyn.

    Pink Talking Fish is a must-see for any fan of the three bands they cover: Pink Floyd, Talking Heads and Phish. The band features Eric Gould on bass, Richard James on keyboards, Zack Burwick on drums and Cal Kehoe on guitar. 

    The Pink Talking Fish fall tour kicks off in late September and brings the band coast-to-coast through 12 states around the country. Shows start on the East Coast in Tarrytown, NY, and Harrisburg, PA, with the band then heading to the Midwest through Ohio, Illinois and Kentucky.

    For Halloween, the band will be in Portsmouth, NH, at The Music Hall, directly following the annual Portsmouth Halloween Parade. In November, Pink Talking Fish will head to California for the Golden Road Festival in Sanger, along with other shows in San Luis Obispo, Menlo Park, and Auburn.

    Later in November marks a return to the Brooklyn Bowl in NYC with special guest Trukken, a band that performs heavy metal versions of Grateful Dead songs. 

    After the fall tour, Pink Talking Fish will close out the year with a New Year’s Eve run, which includes two-night runs in Mill Valley, CA, and Seattle, WA. 

    For those eager to catch a show as soon as possible, Pink Talking Fish will be performing this weekend in Atlanta, GA, at Buckhead Theatre and Charleston, SC, at The Refinery, joining Allman Brothers Band tribute band Trouble No More for a double bill. 

    Visit here for tickets to any of the shows. See below for the tour graphic and a full written list of dates.

    Pink Talking Fish Tour Dates

    Summer Tour:

    7/19: Atlanta GA at Buckhead Theatre – double bill with Trouble No More

    7/20: Charleston SC at The Refinery – double bill with Trouble No More

    7/25: Jackson WY at Snow King Mountain – King Concerts Series with Moe. & Melvin Seals JGB

    7/26: Steamboat CO at Steamboat Square – Stranahan’s FREE Concert Series

    7/27: Denver CO at Cervantes Other Side

    8/02: Atlantic City NJ at The Tropicana Showroom

    8/03: Westport CT at Levitt Pavilion

    8/04: Lafayette NY at Wonderland Forest – Grateful Getaway: The Eleven

    8/10: Dover NH at Revel In The Meadow

    8/30: Salisbury MA at Blue Ocean Music Hall

    8/31: Lake George NY at Adirondack Independence Music Festival

    9/01: Murphysboro IL at The Shawnee Cave Amphitheater – Weekend At The Cave

    Fall Tour:

    9/27: Tarrytown NY at Tarrytown Music Hall

    9/28: Harrisburg PA at XL Live

    10/09: Cleveland OH at Beachland Ballroom

    10/10: Columbus OH at Woodlands Tavern

    10/11: Chicago IL at Park West

    10/12: Covington KY at Madison Theater

    10/13: Buffalo NY at Buffalo Iron Works

    10/17: Chattanooga TN at Barrelhouse Ballroom

    10/18: Nashville TN at Eastside Bowl

    10/19: Louisville KY at Brown Forman Amphitheater

    10/20: Asheville NC at Asheville Music Hall

    10/31: Portsmouth NH at The Music Hall

    11/01: Hartford CT at Infinity Music Hall

    11/07: San Luis Obispo at SLO Brewing Co

    11/08: Sanger CA at Golden Road Festival

    11/09: Menlo Park CA at The Guild Theater

    11/10: Auburn CA at Odd Fellows Hall

    11/22: Brooklyn NY at Brooklyn Bowl w/s/g Trukken

    11/23: Keene NH at The Colonial Theatre

    12/06: Plymouth NH at The Flying Monkey

    12/07: Burlington VT at Higher Ground

    12/21: Portland ME at State Theatre

    New Years Eve Run:

    12/28-29: Mill Valley CA at Sweetwater Music Hall

    12/30-31: Seattle WA at Nectar Lounge

  • Punk Icons NOFX Deliver a Farewell to Remember at Brooklyn Paramount

    Brooklyn Paramount was electric on Saturday, July 13, as NOFX delivered a powerful performance on the second of their three-night stand, part of their much-anticipated final tour.

    These shows were the only US dates on their tour, making them a unique and intimate experience compared to the rest of the Punk in Drublic festival.

    The legendary punk rock band kicked off their worldwide farewell tour on April 22, 2023, in Austin, TX. The tour spans forty cities across the globe, including stops in Australia in January, Europe in May and June, and North America from April to October 2024.

    Each night, NOFX performs 40 songs, featuring full albums and rare tracks, ensuring no setlist is ever repeated. This meticulous planning guarantees a unique experience for every show, culminating in their final performance in Los Angeles on October 6, 2024.

    Frontman Fat Mike, alongside bandmates Eric Melvin, Erik Sandin, and El Hefe, poured their hearts into the Brooklyn Paramount show. The setlist on July 13 was a blend of tracks from at least 12 different albums, with a heavy focus on Wolves in Wolves’ Clothing and Pump Up the Valuum. The night began with the energetic “60%,” and included fan favorites like “Murder the Government,” “Bob,” “What’s the Matter with Parents Today,” “The Longest Line,” and “Drugs Are Good.” The encore was a high-energy conclusion featuring “Bottle to the Ground” and the iconic “Kill All the White Man.”

    Opening the night was Fat Mike’s new project, Codefendants, whose set included “Brutiful,” “Prison Camp,” “Fast Ones,” and “Sell Me Youth.” Following them was Murphy’s Law, a staple of the New York hardcore punk scene since 1982. Despite numerous lineup changes, vocalist Jimmy Drescher remains the heart of the band. Their energetic set included “Quest for Herb,” “Crucial Bar-B-Q,” “Cavity Creeps,” and “Someone’s Gonna Get Their Head Kicked in Tonight.”

    Formed in 1983 in Los Angeles, NOFX has been a cornerstone of the punk rock scene for over four decades. Their rebellious spirit and distinctive sound have influenced countless bands and garnered a dedicated global fanbase. Despite the ups and downs of the music industry, NOFX has maintained their independence, releasing music through their own label, Fat Wreck Chords.

    Fat Mike, the band’s charismatic and often controversial frontman, has been vocal about his reasons for ending NOFX. “Because I don’t enjoy it like I used to,” he told Louder in December 2022. “And if I don’t get loaded, I really don’t want to do it. I don’t need to be onstage hearing people applaud and dance. I don’t need that. Some people are addicted to that.”

    He added, “I’ve started doing stand-up comedy and I like that way better, in front of 30 people. And writing music. I’ve been writing [string] quartets, which I really enjoy, and writing for other people. I have another band called the Codefendants, which is really exciting to me.”

    As the final tour progresses, fans worldwide are cherishing these last moments with NOFX. The Brooklyn Paramount shows are a testament to the band’s enduring legacy and their unwavering connection with their audience. For those in attendance on July 13, it was a night of nostalgia, high energy, and a bittersweet farewell to one of punk rock’s most influential bands.

    Codefendants Setlist: Brutifal, Defcons, Abscessed, Suicide by Pigs, Disaster Scenes, Prison Camp, Fast Ones, Counting Back From 13, Sell Me Youth

    NOFX Setlist: 60%, Seeing Double at the Triple Rock, Murder the Government, Bob, Pharmacist’s Daughter, 72 Hookers, All Outta Angst, Louise, The Man I Killed, Leaving Jesusland, What’s the Matter With Parents Today, 100 Times Fuckeder, The Marxist Brothers, Fuck the Kids, Juice Head, Hobophobic, Monosyllabic Girls, I’m Telling Tim, Instant Crassic, Can’t Get the Stink Out, The Longest Line, What Now My Love, I Don’t Like Me Anymore, Drugs Are Good, Benny Got Blowed Up, Radio, Shut Up Already, Green Corn, All My Friends In New York, The Seperation of Church and Skate

    Encore: Riff Raff, Dinosaurs Will Die, Herojuana, Bottles to the Ground, Kill all the White Man

  • Soul Coughing Announces Reunion Tour With Final Date in NYC

    Soul Coughing, one of the most unique and influential rock and roll bands of the last four decades, is returning to the stage fully formed for the first time in 25 years.

    All four original members, Mike Doughty, Sebastian Steinberg, Mark degli Antoni and Yuval Gabay will be performing from coast to coast this September and October, capping the tour off with back-to-back nights in New York City.

    NIELS VAN IPEREN/GETTY IMAGES

    Each exclusive performance will feature songs from their El Oso, Irresistible Bliss and their genre-defining debut album Ruby Vroom which celebrates its 30th anniversary this fall.

    The four members of Soul Coughing have said it again and again to audiences, fans, and journalists: We will not reunite. Stop asking. Well, you might want to pose that question one more time, because the tune has changed. This fall, all four original members will take the stage once more, with 17 dates across the country—bringing their glorious, off-kilter magic to a whole new audience.

    Mike Doughty (vocals/guitar), Mark degli Antoni (keyboards/sampler), Sebastian Steinberg (bass), and Yuval Gabay (drums) formed Soul Coughing in 1992 after meeting at New York’s Knitting Factory, where Doughty worked the door. A truly eclectic collection of musicians, the guys merged drum & bass, trance, rock & roll and hip-hop to create a totally unique strain of music. As Doughty says: “Our music didn’t fit into the landscape then and it doesn’t now. We were super incorrect. We were messy. We were all over the place. There were moments in our career where we tried to be less different, and we always failed.” And thank God for that.

    Over their eight-year history, the guys collected a motley crew of fans who gravitated to the deeply weird—yet danceable—energy of their discography, starting off with their 1994 debut, Ruby Vroom. They broke up in 2000, but Soul Coughing has lived on in the minds and hearts of their most ardent fans—and a new crop of listeners who may have heard standouts like “Super Bon Bon” on a video game soundtrack or “Circles” on a favorite TV show.

    And the guys themselves are no slouches. Doughty has been releasing solo records at a steady clip since the band broke up and has penned two memoirs. Meanwhile, degli Antoni has thrown himself into the soundtrack world, scoring films by the likes of Wernor Herzog. He also collabed with Steinberg, who has played with everyone from Iron & Wine to Fiona Apple—notably on her critically acclaimed 2020 record Fetch the Bolt Cutters. Steinberg also linked up with Gabay on a drum and bass project called UV Ray and select recordings for Suzanne Vega. Gabay then moved to the U.K. and recorded with DJ Krust, ADF, and Roni Size Reprazent.

    When they hit the 30th anniversary of Ruby Vroom, though, Doughty started looking backward. After playing the whole record on tour solo, he reached out to the band with a radical idea: a reunion tour where they’d play a best-of collection of tracks from Vroom, 1996’s Irresistible Bliss, and 1998’s El Oso. “The end was acrimonious, but I just thought I’d give it a shot,” he says. “So I just wrote an email to all three guys. It took a little convincing for some of them, but I was really gratified that everyone wanted to take part in that again—to see if we can be a great band again.”

    To say the guys were shocked might be a bit of an understatement. But it was also a kind of much-needed salvation. “When he first reached out it was such a relief,” says Steinberg. “We all have our part to play in any dysfunctional relationship. But it was an immediate relief. I could just say, ‘Hey, man, we did something wonderful. And I’m sorry, too. That was cool.’” Gabay had a similar reaction: “I respect the music. I love what I did there. I love what the guys are doing—we were a good band.”

    As for the setlist, that’s still in flux. Doughty lives in Memphis, degli Antoni in New York, Steinberg in L.A., and Gabay in Jerusalem, so they have yet to get together for rehearsals. Still, they’re all practicing—and will rehearse for a solid week leading up to the show. Doughty is singing three hours per day, Steinberg is getting back into the very muscular swing of Soul Coughing, as is Gabay—and degli Antoni? He’s unearthing his old sampler—which he bought decades ago with his student loan money—and sorting through everything from snippets of ‘60s songs to seagull calls.

    “We’re just trying to pick the songs that bring us joy,” Doughty says. “We’re really trying to kind of revel in each other as musicians and that’s what the setlist is going to be based on. One thing that’s always been true about this band is every song is somebody’s favorite song.”

    “Really one of the best conversations I’ve had in this band ever was Mike and I sitting down by the L.A. river for almost two hours and just going through the songs,” Steinberg adds. “I think there’s nothing I wouldn’t try to tackle, because it’s all so insane.” As for the clubs, they went back to venues that supported them back in the day. “Our agents did some archaeological work, finding people in the music business that would really care about this—and really, really be excited about it,” Doughty says.

    As they head toward making history, all Soul Coughing knows for sure is that the band was something special—something never replicated. And this time around, it’s all about unity. “Music is a place of escapism, for people to go to a magical world,” Gabay says. “That’s what interests me. I want to bring people together. How can you bring a variety of people to the gig? Music brings people together—both the band and the audience.”

    And as for how they promised to never get back together? “We just decided to let bygones be bygones. You know, everybody had issues,” Doughty says. “Our fans are going to be shocked, man. I can’t even believe how much they’re going to be shocked.”

    Find tickets and information on the tour here. See below for a full list of dates.

    Full Tour Lineup

    September

    11 – San Diego, CA – Belly Up Tavern

    13 – Los Angeles, CA – The Bellwether

    14 & 15 – San Francisco, CA – The Fillmore

    17 – Portland, OR – Crystal Ballroom

    18 – Seattle, WA – The Showbox

    20 – Salt Lake City, UT – The Depot

    21 – Denver, CO – Ogden Theatre

    22 – Boulder, CO – Boulder Theater

    24 – Minneapolis, MN – First Avenue

    25 – Chicago, IL – Vic Theatre

    27 – Pittsburgh, PA – Mr. Small’s Theatre

    28 – Washington, DC – 9:30 Club

    29 – Boston, MA – Royale

    October

    3 – Philadelphia, PA – Union Transfer

    4 & 5 – Brooklyn, NY – Brooklyn Steel

  • BAM Announces New Artistic Director and Fall Season Events

    The Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) has announced the program for the Fall 2024 season, along with their new musical director, Amy Cassello. Since 2013, Cassello has filled several roles for BAM, including programming, artistic director, and producer. During her decade-long run, Cassello produced and oversaw numerous concerts, plays, festivals, and series at BAM.

    This fall, BAM will host a multidisciplinary variety of programs, including plays, poetry readings, multimedia demonstrations, dance shows, holiday concert series, and a new set of in-house resident musicians. Among the events is this year’s rendition of Next Wave, an arts showcase contextualizing the artistic visions projected for the near future. Also featured this year is the return of BAMboo!, The Best of BAMkids Film Festival, and a film program featuring repertory screenings alongside new releases.

    brooklyn academy of music
    Amy Cassello, Artistic Director, BAM Brooklyn Academy of Music, Brooklyn, New York, June 7, 2024. Photograph © Beowulf Sheehan

    Each year, the Next Wave 2024 & Emerging Visions events represent dynamic elements integral to BAM’s path into the future. With a renewed focus on works-in-process, increased presentations from the Global South, and greater investment in presenting partnerships, Next Wave and Emerging Visions support musicians and artists from all over the country. These events provide artists with the space and resources necessary to showcase their hard work and serve as a reminder to all that BAM will always welcome creative visionaries, no matter where they are from or where they trained.

    This is an exciting moment for BAM as we bridge our past with our future. Amy is a deep thinker who considers the needs of artists and arts workers at every turn. As a longstanding BAM programmer and creative producer, she intimately understands our role in the arts ecosystem. I could not have a better partner in leading BAM’s artistic programming at this pivotal moment.

    Gina Duncan, BAM President

    This year’s Next Wave presents well-known creators who bring their groundbreaking theater, music, poetry, multi-media, and dance to the BAM stage. Works being presented at Next Wave include Bill T. Jones’s Still/Here, Hanif Abdurraqib’s election week poetry program honoring the legacy of June Jordan, Dana Gingras’ Frontera, Guillermo Cacace’s Gaviota, Tiago Rodrigues’ Catarina and the Beauty of Killing Fascists, Silkroad Ensemble with Rhiannon Giddens’ American Railroad, Liquid Music’s Sun Dogs, Modesto Flako Jimenez’s Mercedes, Part 1, Journey LIVE with American Composers Orchestra, and ONX Studio’s TECHNE

    Among the new works being presented at BAM, the theatre has also announced its resident artists for the 2024 season. This year’s BAM residents include Baba Oludaré, Hope Boykin, Mayfield Brooks, Delano Burrowes, Kayla Hamilton, Soomi Kim, and Yaa Samar! Dance Theatre. 

    brooklyn academy of music

    Below are the dates for Emerging Visions and Next Wave. For more information and tickets, visit BAM’s website here.

    Emerging Visions

    Sep 17—Oct 20: Safety Not Guaranteed, directed by Lee Sunday Evans, with music by Guster’s Ryan Miller 

    Oct 24—27: Preview performances of a new play, Reconstructing (Still Working but the Devil Might Be Inside), directed by Rachel Chavkin and Zhailon Levingston 

    Next Wave 2024 – BAM Howard Gilman Opera House, 30 Lafayette Ave Brooklyn

    Oct 25—27 Music engagement (to be announced June 26)
    Oct 30—Nov 2 Bill T. Jones’s Still/Here
    Nov 5—9 Hanif Abdurraqib’s I Guess It Was My Destiny To Live So Long poetry series
    Nov 8 & 9 Dana Gingras’ Frontera
    Nov 13—23 Guillermo Cacace’s Gaviota
    Nov 13—17 Tiago Rodrigues’ Catarina and the Beauty of Killing Fascists
    Nov 18 & 19 Liquid Music’s Sun Dogs with Alarm Will Sound
    Nov 23 Silkroad Ensemble with Rhiannon Giddens’ American Railroad
    Dec 3—8 Modesto Jimenez’s Mercedes, Part 1
    Dec 6 & 7 Journey LIVE with American Composers Orchestra
    Jan 4—19 ONX Studio’s TECHNE

    Holiday Offerings 

    Dec 12—22: Mark Morris Dance Group’s The Hard Nut 
    TBD: Music engagement 

  • Tycho Announces Tour With Date At Brooklyn Steel

    After a long hiatus, San Francisco Based Producer and musician, Tycho announced his first tour in five years, Including a date in Brooklyn.

    Tycho announced that he’s dropping a new album, Infinite Health, on Aug. 30 and released a new single “Phantom” on June 25. With these two announcements he also released his 2024 North American tour dates. On Nov. 12 he is set to perform at Brooklyn Steel.

    Tycho, also known as Scott Hansen, is an electronic, IDM music producer who has worked on music for artists like Maggie Rogers and Leon Bridges. Tycho is also a two-time Grammy nominee. He was nominated for Best Dance/Electronic Album for his 2016 album Epoch and again for his album Weather in 2020.

    His new music takes a more electronic route. “I wanted ‘Phantom’ to feel like a blend of lights in a nightclub with some unknown entity; a moving and shifting intelligence that served as a conduit to a deeper understanding of what’s beneath the surface of existence,” Hansen said. Although “Phantom” is a dance track, it doesn’t feel too heavy or intense in contrast more techno club music.

    Infinite Health is set to be a danceable album. “The big overarching concept, at least on the technical side, is ‘Let’s try to make this sound as different as possible,’” Hansen said about the new tracks.

    Tickets for Tychos’s tour go on sale on June 28 on AXS.

    Tycho Tour Dates

    SEPTEMBER

    13 – Ogden, UT – Ogden Twilight

    14 – Boise, ID – Knitting Factory Concert House

    15 – Eugene, OR – McDonald Theatre

    17 – Portland, OR – Revolution Hall

    18 – Vancouver, BC – New Hollywood Theater

    19 – Seattle, WA – Showbox SoDo

    20 – Spokane, WA – Knitting Factory Concert House

    21 – Bozeman, MT – The ELM

    23 – Missoula, MT – The Wilma

    25 – Denver, CO – Mission Ballroom

    27 – Stateline, NV – Harrah’s LAke Tahoe

    28 – San Francisco, CA – Portola Music Festival 2024

    OCTOBER

    29 – San Diego, CA – The Sound

    30 – Phoenix, AZ – The Van Buren

    31 – Santa Fe, NM – Meow Wolf

    NOVEMBER

    3 – Dallas, TX – Granada Theater

    4 – Houston, TX – White Oak Music Hall

    7 – Atlanta, GA – The Eastern

    8 – Pelham, TN – The Caverns

    9 – Charlottesville, VA – Jefferson Theater

    10 – Philadelphia, PA – Union Transfer

    11 – Boston, MA – Royale

    12 – Brooklyn, NY – Brooklyn Steel

    14 – Toronto, ONT – History

    15 – Chicago, IL – The Salt Shed

    16 – Minneapolis, MN – First Avenue

  • The Church Co-Headline Brooklyn Paramount With Afghan Whigs On A Hot & Steamy NYC Night

    A destination venue for industry veterans and rising stars, Brooklyn Paramount hosted The Church and The Afghan Whigs for their second co-headlining show on a 19-date tour this past Thursday evening, June 20.

    Originally opened in 1928 and dubbed ‘America’s first movie theater built for sound,’ Brooklyn Paramount reopened its famed doors in the heart of downtown this past March, and since doing so, has seen a constant stream of genre-spanning musical talent – with a full slate of artists scheduled well into December. The night’s festivities were presented by WFUV, a non-commercial radio station owned by Fordham University, located on its Bronx campus, and nationally recognized for its alternative music format.

    Fans wait in line ahead of entering Brooklyn Paramount | Photo Credit: Michael Dinger

    Providing opening support was Kristin Hersh, who in addition to her solo work which often features emotional vocals delivered in raw, visceral manner, is best known for her singing and songwriting in the alternative rock band Throwing Muses. Taking a lone seat at center stage promptly at 7:30 pm, Hersh warmed up the large swarm of fans who arrived early to see her 30 minute set, which comprised three Throwing Muses offerings and four tracks selected from her eleven solo albums – Hips and Makers (1994), Sunny Border Blue (2001), Crooked (2010) and Clear Pond Road (2023).

    At 8:10 pm, The Afghan Whigs appeared onstage and immediately launched into a 15-song set spanning a nearly four decade career. Hailing from Cincinnati, Ohio, the duo of frontman Greg Dulli and bassist John Curley – who started it all way back in 1986 – are cited as having influenced several musicians of high esteem in their own right, including fellow Ohio natives The National, Interpol, and The Gaslight Anthem, to name but a few.

    Greg Dulli of The Afghan Whigs | Photo Credit: Michael Dinger

    An eclectic blend of alternative and indie rock, post-punk, grunge, and for good measure, R&B, the hour-long set kicked off with “Pantomima,” the lead single from Dulli’s 2020 solo album Random Desire. Apart from an astounding cover of English singer-songwriter Martina Topley‐Bird’s “Too Tough to Die” midway through, The Afghan Whigs gifted its fans several of what are considered the best tunes from their nine studio album catalog.

    Standout numbers from the night included the moody and atmospheric “Debonair” (Gentlemen, 1993), fan favorite “Algiers” and “Matamoros” (Do to the Beast, 2014), the introspective “Oriole” (In Spades, 2017), and “Somethin’ Hot” (1965, 1998), featuring a driving rhythm accompanied by a sound palette of power guitar riffs and energetic percussion.

    John Curley of The Afghan Whigs | Photo Credit: Michael Dinger

    The Church are touring off the strength of their most recent two albums, the universally hailed album The Hypnogogue, and its companion science fiction concept album Eros Zeta and the Perfumed Guitars, released in 2023 and 2024, respectively. The Aussie psych-rock quintet of founder Steve Kilbey (lead vocals, bass), long-time collaborator Tim Powles (drummer), Ian Haug (guitarist formerly of Australian rock icons Powderfinger, who joined the band in 2013), Jeffrey Cain (multi-instrumentalist who has been a full-time member since early-2020), and Ashley Nalor (touring guitarist and backing vocalist for The Church since February 2020, best known for fronting the Melbourne-based band named Even) silently slithered onstage under the cover of darkness at approximately 9:45 pm.

    As The Hypnogogue’s title track played over the house PA, the crowd waited in eager anticipation as the slow burning introduction, with its multiple sonic layers, continued to build momentum. At long last, the cinematic extravaganza was underway.

    Steve Kilbey of The Church | Photo Credit: Michael Dinger

    With selections presented from six LPs spread across their massive discography (25 studio albums in total), The Church’s dreamy psychedelia experience continued with “Myrrh” (Heyday, 1985), but not before Kilbey first greeted the more than 2,000 souls in attendance. “Good evening ladies and gentlemen, thank you very much. We are so happy to be here tonight. What a wonderful – the word splendid comes to my mind – what a splendid, old theater. Thanks so much for coming along.”

    Kilbey introduced the next song, “Metropolis” (Gold Afternoon Fix, 1990), as “the last time we ever darkened the doorstep of commercial radio, 34 years ago, you may remember this one.” The proceeding mystical journey that he and his bandmates brought all of us on was filled with indelible highlights, with too many to list in this review. However, the goosebump-inducing moment that tops that list, for me at least, would have to be The Church’s performance of “No Other You” (The Hypnogogue), a heartfelt love song showcasing Kilbey’s voice filled with a yearning for a woman who cannot be replaced.

    The Church | Photo Credit: Michael Dinger

    Outside of their psychedelic-tinged, instant classics appearing on 1988’s Starfish, “Under The Milky Way” and “Reptile,” the album that put Kilbey and company on my radar as a 16-year old entranced by their anthemic songs filled with melody and orchestration, it was another track from The Hypnogogue that filled the venue with an overall sense of reflection. The operatic “Flickering Lights,” which found Haug taking up the mandolin, was appropriately rendered by The Church to a backdrop of bright white flashing stage lights and multicolored strobes.

    The stellar live show culminated with two tracks collected from opposite ends of their storied career – “Last Melody” (Eros Zeta and the Perfumed Guitars, 2024) and “You Took” (The Blurred Crusade, 1982) – a trippy, cosmic jam filled with epic, swirling guitar.

    Watch The Church perform two hit songs from their aforementioned fifth studio album Starfish, “Under The Milky Way” and “Reptile,” below:

    Following the current run of North American tour dates which ends in Los Angeles on July 13, our favorite mates have cleared their calendar for the duration of the summer. However, if at the end of the year you find yourself in the Land Down Under, The Church have a series of six shows beginning at the Enmore Theatre in Newton on November 23, culminating at Hindley Street Music Hall in Adelaide on December 7. Dates sandwiched between include stops in St Kilda, Brisbane, Hobart and Perth.

    Kristin Hersh Setlist: Eyeshine > Kay Catherine (Throwing Muses song) > Mississippi Kite > Your Ghost > City of the Dead (Throwing Muses song) > Bywater (Throwing Muses song) > Your Dirty Answer

    The Afghan Whigs Setlist: Pantomima (Greg Dulli song) > Debonair > Catch a Colt > Algiers > 66 > Matamoros > What Jail Is Like > Too Tough to Die (Martina Topley‐Bird cover) > Light as a Feather > Oriole > It Kills > Demon in Profile > Going to Town > Somethin’ Hot > Summer’s Kiss

    The Church Setlist: The Hypnogogue > Myrrh > Metropolis > C’est la vie > No Other You > Under the Milky Way > An Interlude > Flickering Lights > Reptile > Realm of Minor Angels > Grind > Last Melody > You Took

    UPCOMING TOUR DATES

    June 24 – Toronto, ON @ The Danforth Music Hall

    June 25 – Detroit, MI @ The Majestic Theatre

    June 27 – Indianapolis, IN @ Hi-Fi

    June 28 – Chicago, IL @ The Vic Theatre

    June 29 – Milwaukee, WI @ Summerfest 2024

    June 30 – Minneapolis, MN @ First Avenue

    July 2 – Denver, CO @ Ogden Theatre

    July 3 – Bellvue, CO @ The Mishawaka

    July 5 – Seattle, WA @ The Showbox

    July 6 – Portland, OR @ McMenamins Crystal Ballroom

    July 8 – Sacramento, CA @ The Sofia

    July 9 – San Francisco, CA @ The Fillmore

    July 11 – San Diego, CA @ The Observatory North Park

    July 12 – Anaheim, CA @ House of Blues Anaheim

    July 13 – Los Angeles, CA @ The United Theater on Broadway

    KRISTIN HERSH

    THE AFGHAN WHIGS

    THE CHURCH