Philadelphia

The Extraordinaires’ Jay Purdy Added to Tuesday Tune-Out (Sept. 18) & Classic Video Footage

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We just wanted to announce that The Extraordinaires’ Jay Purdy has been added as an opener to our Tuesday Tune-Out on September 18 at PhilaMOCA with Arrah and the Ferns. Also while searching for videos on YouTube for a guest post that will be over later today at The Key, we got a kick out of and wanted to share with you footage that we discovered of a very youthful-looking Purdy performing an Extraordinaire fan favorite “Neighborhood Watch” for the first time ever. Classic! We also provided you with its official album version.

NYC

Artists on Trial: Mikal Shapiro

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(Photo by Tammy Shell)

Our next featured Crossroads Music Fest artist is Mikal Shapiro. Like Velghe, she’s a prolific songwriter with a distinct personality in her music. Mikal recently moved back to Kansas City after spending time around the country. We’re glad to be able to sit down with her and find out more about her and what she’s up to.

The Deli: Gun to your head, 1 sentence to describe your music. What is it?

Mikal ShapiroAn internationally-unknown Broadway musical about a gypsy bandit and her love for animals.

The Deli: Tell us about your latest release or upcoming shows. What can we expect?

Mikal: I just moved back home after a seven-year hiatus in New York, Hawaii and Chicago, so I’m ready to make some music with my KC crew. I play CMF with Kasey Rausch in our new project Partners in Glory Saturday, September 8 from 8:00 to 9:00 pm at Czar. Then Thursday, September 20 at Coda with Betse Ellis and John Keck. At the end of the month, I’m at Prospero’s Bookstore with Brian Frame, on Saturday, September 29 at 10:30 pm. You could say I’m making up for lost time.

The Deli: What does "supporting local music" mean to you?

MikalGetting off the internet and going outside where real music exists on a daily basis.

The Deli: Who are your favorite "local" musicians right now?

Mikal: So many to choose from but off the top: Witch and Hare, Rural Grit All-Stars, Ruddy Swain, Kasey Rausch, Metatone, Dead Voices, Victor and Penny, Brian Frame, Amy Farrand, Makuza, Folkicide, Terrence Moore, People’s Liberation Big Band, Stan Kessler, Claire Adams, Rachel Gaither, Emily Tummons and the crickets in my basement.

The Deli: Who are your favorite not-so-local musicians right now?

MikalEleni Mandell (LA), Elvis Perkins (NY), Celia Shacklett and Fire Dog (STL), DeVotchka (CO), Mountain Man, Dark Dark Dark, Boog (Philly), The Cartolinas (Chicago), Box Jellyfish (Chicago), Hypnotic Brass Ensemble (NY).

The Deli: What bands are you most excited to see at Crossroads Music Fest this year?

MikalDang, all of them. Those I know, those I don’t know. I’m lucky to be in the lineup with all these rockers.

The Deli: What is your ultimate fantasy bill to play on?

MikalI played it. Ruddy Swain and Eleni Mandell at Davey’s Uptown. Where were you? 🙂

The Deli: Would you rather spend the rest of your life on stage or in the recording studio?

MikalYes.

The Deli: A music-themed Mount Rushmore. What four faces are you putting up there and why?

Mikal: Lisa Gerrard: her ghostly voice.
Leonard Cohen: his smoking lyrics.
Eleni Mandell: her ghostly voice and smoking lyrics.
For the fourth, I’m thinking Rural-Grit All-Star Mark Smeltzer. Have you seen his face? It’s awesome..

The Deli: All right, give us the rundown. Where all on this big crazy web can you be found?

Mikal: Mikalshapiro.com, baby.

The Deli: Always go out on a high note. Any last words of wisdom for The Deli audience?

Mikal: Dear music lovers, show your faces. You are my heroes. You make the scene. Thank you for your support.

Mikal plays the fest this Saturday at 8:00 pm at Czar. Be sure to make it to see her wonderful, artistic work.  

–Michelle Bacon

Michelle is editor-in-chief of The Deli – Kansas City. She also has a weekly column with The Kansas City Star and reviews music for Ink. She plays with Deco AutoDrew Black and Dirty Electric, and Dolls on Fire. Her favorite salty snack growing up was Shrimp Chips from the Asian grocery store.

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Philadelphia

Satellite Hearts Here to Stay at Dobbs Sept. 2

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Satellite Hearts is a group constructed on the classic blueprint of a power trio. J. M. Pellechia’s distinct, raw lead vocals and in your face guitar playing fit rather naturally with the heavy thud of Lucas Rinz’s bass and the smashing percussion styling of Keaton Thandi. This band doesn’t knock on the front door. It kicks it in and dares you to question their authority. With an unabashed psych rock mentality that is balanced by catchy lyrics and a knack for finding the workingman’s groove, Satellite Hearts will force their way in, but once you’ve heard what they have to offer, you’ll invite them to stay. The Legendary Dobbs, 304 South Street, 9pm, Free, 21+ – Michael Colavita
 
NYC

Artists on Trial: John Velghe & The Prodigal Sons

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(Photo by Matt Naquin)

This week we’re kicking off our Artists on Trial series with several bands playing Crossroads Music Fest this weekend. We’re starting with John Velghe & The Prodigal Sons, a group filled with Kansas City superstars (from bands like The Hearts of Darkness, Diverse and The New Riddim). Velghe, one of the area’s most prolific and heartfelt songwriters, takes a few moments to tell us a bit about the group.

The Deli: Gun to your head, 1 sentence to describe your music. What is it?

John VelgheRock n roll troubadour; music with brains and guts.

The Deli: Tell us about your latest release or upcoming shows. What can we expect?

John: We’ve been demoing for the new record which is sounding great. We’ll be debuting new material at CMF. We just got done with a tour to the East coast where we started opening up some new cities to our music and bookers in cities like Cleveland, New York and Chicago are asking us to come back. So, we’re hoping we can get back there next Spring after SXSW.

The Deli: What does "supporting local music" mean to you?

JohnIt means participating in itthat doesn’t require you being a musician either. I’m going to just go ahead and call people in KC out: too many of them honestly do not realize or appreciate how much better hearing music in a crowd makes you feel. In two decades of playing here I’ve played to no one and I’ve played to packed rooms. The quality of the show and the music is proportional to the number of people in the crowd and their participation in the show. We play cities like Austin, Cleveland, New York and people engage in music with such regularity that they know how important it is to their enjoyment of life. They understand that it’s hot, sweaty, communal and doesn’t sound like listening to an MP3 on their laptop through a set of earbudsthat’s the point of it. And that whole experience makes the music better too.  Bandsgood bandslearn how to make their music better from their experiences at performances.

When you go to see a show, you help enable the next one to be even better and the next record will reflect a little of you in it.

The Deli: Who are your favorite "local" musicians right now?

JohnI got a sneak listen to the new Pedaljets record yesterday. It’s great. The songs are so good—very well thought outand the playing is killer. I saw Deco Auto a few times and they have great songs.

The Deli: Who are your favorite not-so-local musicians right now?

JohnWell, I’ve been preaching the gospel of Alejandro Escovedo for a long time and it seems like that kid is finally going places.  His whole band is truly great people. I’ve also been into a lot of New Orleans artists lately: Glen David Andrews, John Boutte, Irma Thomas. Shoes just put out a new record. I have some of their records from the ’70s and they’re great songwriters.

The Deli: What bands are you most excited to see at Crossroads Music Fest this year?

JohnStarhaven Rounders for sure. I’ve been meaning to see them for a while.

The Deli: What is your ultimate fantasy bill to play on?

JohnBruce Springsteen, Alejandro Escovedo, Trombone Shorty, and us. Al could open.

The Deli: Would you rather spend the rest of your life on stage or in the recording studio?

JohnOn tour. Something happens on tour that nothing else is a substitute for. The band improves, the travel informs my songs, the people we meet are all unique and true music fans. The new locations give me a better experience of humanity and a higher threshold for discomfort.

The Deli: A music-themed Mount Rushmore. What four faces are you putting up there and why?

JohnI put these faces up there because I consider them the founding fathers of American music:

Duke Ellington: He perfected the American musical idiom. He’s a brilliant arranger, orchestrator, and he moved asses. His success is why we have a lot of the music we have today.

Chuck Berry: He had the imagination to combine the blues and country and turn them into rock n roll. He inspired bands like The Beatles, The Stones and countless others.

Some amalgam of the faces of the members of R.E.M.: To me, they invented what became alternative music. They maintained a collectivist mindset for a long time, even with their massive success. That four-as-one ethos was the foundation of what became indie music until it was turned into more of a pose than an operative principle. There may not be an "indie" genre without them.

Chuck D: He was one of the inventors of rap and hip hop. In that era, Chuck gave music a license to be political again. I think he inspired a lot of the people making music today in all kinds of genres.

The Deli: All right, give us the rundown. Where all on this big crazy web can you be found?

John: www.facebook.com/johnvelghe 
www.JohnVelghe.com

www.twitter.com/johnvelghe
JohnVelghe.bandcamp.com

www.lakeshore-records.com/

The Deli: Always go out on a high note. Any last words of wisdom for The Deli audience?

JohnThe best thing to happen to you is not Google fucking Fiber. If you’re a musician, act like people engaging in your music is the most important thing on earth to you, because your songs are more compelling when they do. If you’re not a musician, get out of your living room, get off your ass, go engage in music. You’ll lose weight, your skin will clear up, you’ll have better sex, kids will think you are cool and your parents will be proud of you.

You can catch John with The Prodigal Sons at Crossroads Music Fest on Saturday, September 8 at Czar. They’ll be taking the stage at 9:30 pm. Get out of your living room, get off your ass, and go engage in some great local music.  

–Michelle Bacon

Michelle is editor-in-chief of The Deli – Kansas City. She also has a weekly column with The Kansas City Star and reviews music for Ink. She plays with Deco AutoDrew Black and Dirty Electric, and Dolls on Fire. She really, really wants to wear cool hats.

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NYC

Crossroads Music Fest Preview

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The 8th annual Crossroads Music Fest kicks off this Friday, September 7 with a pre-party at Crossroads KC at Grinder’s! The show will include performances from The Good Foot, The Grisly Hand, and a special reunion show from The Supernauts. Tickets are $10 in advance and $13 on the day of the show.

The fest continues on Saturday, September 8 at Czar, The Brick and Midwestern Musical Co. Performances from The Hearts of Darkness, Starhaven Rounders, My Brothers & Sisters, Dead Voices, The Hillary Watts Riot, Dim Peepers, Appropriate Grammar, John Velghe & The Prodigal Sons, Cherokee Rock Rifle, Makuza, Victor & Penny, Mikal Shapiro, Rural Grit All-Stars, Thom Hoskins, The Atlantic and Kasey RauschA full schedule can be found at the link here. Saturday tickets are $15 in advance and $18 on the day of the show. Tickets for both days are $20 in advance. Each venue also has its own cover if you don’t have a festival pass. More info here.

The fest also includes a Legal Bootcamp for Musicians on Saturday, September 8 at Czar from 12:00-5:00 pm presented by the Kansas City Volunteer Lawyers & Accountants for the Arts. More info can be found at the link here. Admission is $10 if you are attending CMF.

Crossroads Music Fest is presented by Spice of Life Productions and co-sponsored by the Midwest Music Foundation (who also makes The Deli KC possible!). If you’re interested in volunteering for CMF, please contact rhonda@midwestmusicfound.org.

–Michelle Bacon

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Philadelphia

Get Carried Away w/Neighborhood Choir at KFN Sept. 1

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Bennett Daniels creates whimsical pop songs in his project Neighborhood Choir. Performing tonight at Kung Fu Necktie, he will be accompanied on stage by Laser Background bandmate Andy Moholt, Michael Chadwick (ex-Armchairs) and Paul Sukeena of SPACIN’. Daniels does a terrific job of crafting material that drifts the listener on a pillow cloud with its multi-dimensional calming atmospherics that are often built from a simple guitar riff or drumbeat and transformed on its path upward to a complex yet peaceful conclusion. Neighborhood Choir will be opening for JRG, the relatively new project from Arches’ Julien Rossow Greenberg. Kung Fu Necktie 1250 N. Front St., 7:30, $5, 21+ – Michael Colavita