NYC

NYC Artist on the rise: Yellerkin goes camping + plays Northside on 06.14

Posted on:

Originating from upstate NY, and recently relocated to (you guessed it) Brooklyn, Yellerkin is a duo comprised of two childhood friends who’ve been knowning each other for twenty years (that’s always the best way to form a band). Their self-titled debut EP is a true hybrid of new and old sounds and atmoshperes, characterized by very melodious vocals and a predilection for vocal harmonies (if you like simplifications, think about a more Animal Collective-ish version of The Dodos). Their single Solar Laws (streaming) unconventionally blends benjos and a placid falsetto melody with brushed drums playing a frantic swinging bluegrass rhythm. The band was chosen by The Wild Honey Pie for their upcoming episode of their Welcome Camper series, which sounds like an awesome paid vacation for bands with extra filming and recording perks, and will also play the NYC blog’s upcoming Northside show at Brooklyn Bowl on June 14.

We added this song to The Deli’s playlist of Best songs by emerging NYC artists – check it out!

Philadelphia

Free Download: “Come On Man” – Marc Neibauer

Posted on:

Here is a new single from Marc Neibauer called "Come on Man," which he proudly proclaims to be "full of Phil Collins/Miami Vice vibes." Yeah, we’ve definitely been noticing the trend of folks professing their love for the former Genesis drummer/singer – whether truly or ironically. You can stream and download the track for free below.

L.A.

Video: The Black Tibetans, “You’re Cold”

Posted on:

If you’re looking for no-frills garage rock then look no further than The Black Tibetans. The up-and-coming quartet just released an official music video for the track "You’re Cold", which forms one side of their new two track EP The Nashville Session. The EP carries the heavy endorsement of Dan Auerbach of the Black Keys, who produced the record and also plays second guitar on the track.

The Black Tibetans – You’re Cold – (Official Music Video) from SRCE production on Vimeo.

Nashville

Weekend Roundup

Posted on:

Sure, maybe The Kills are in playing, but wouldn’t the weekend be better spent supporting local by crawling around with Nashville’s best and dirtiest punk rockers and glitterati? 

Friday: 

Tipper Whore’s album release party with Ben Spinks Supermelt and Roman Polanski’s Baby at The Stone Fox, 9pm, $10 cover  (which also buys you a cd or vinyl edition "Just the Tip.")

Radar Vs. Wolf with Ravenhill and Dohse at The East Room, 9pm, $5

Judson McKinney at Atomic Sweater Records, 9pm, $7

Tennessee Scum Double Release Show with The Suez, Ebony Eyes and Thunder Brother at The Boro, 9pm, free

Saturday: 

Caitlin Rose, The Haunted Windchimes and Paul Lindburg at The 5 Spot, 9pm, $5

bree, Kim Logan, Lauren Farrah and Them Vibes play this week’s East Side Hootenany at East Park.  Things kick off at 4pm, and its free!

Turbo Fruits, Tesla Rossa, Leopold and his Fiction and Commitment Bells play The High Watt starting at 9pm.  Cover is $10 in advance and $12 the day of show. 

Moon Age EP Release show with Farewell Flight, Warren Pash and Jordan Jones at The Basement, 9pm, $5

Sunday: 

No. 308 is holding F*ck Your Block Party! with Tesla Rossa, Sexx, Slick, Banditos, and JP Harris. 4pm, free

The Basement’s Sunday Post includes *repeat, repeat, Mystery Twins, INTL, Beech Benders and Buffalo Rodeo, 8pm, free

 

 

 

 

San Francisco

Song Premiere: Growwler – Long Hair, Short Wits

Posted on:

The exuberant band, Growwler is celebrating their album release today. We wrote about it here. We’re honored to be able to share a song from their upcoming single, Long Hair, Short Wits. This A side title track is a charming acoustic track that has style and character, melding folk and college indie rock together in a talented and unassuming manner.

I know that combination sounds odd, but Growwler makes it work and owns their musical style effortlessly. Please take the time to enjoy Long Hair, Short Wits and join Growwler, Giggle Party and Taxes at Public Works TONIGHT to celebrate this single’s release!! Support hardworking, local, emerging bands. We’ll say it over and over, cus we love what they do. –je

NYC

The Few, The Proud, The Strange: An interview with Not A Planet

Posted on:
 
Not A Planet is a band that has been heightening the KC music scene since 2010. The band’s devoted fans and passion for creating powerful music has allowed them to tour the United States and produce its first full-length album, The Few, The Proud, The Strange, in 2013. Not A Planet’s tour manager, Jodie Platz, coordinated and joined this interview, which took place in their practice room at her home. 
 
The Deli:  What conflicts in your life have inspired your lyrics?
 
Nathan Corsi: My experiences as a kid made me feel like I had a lot to prove. I have really supportive parents. I went to a conservatory for a year before I dropped out. A lot of great writers had troubled childhoods, and I think I had a more troubled adulthood that causes me to write the way I do. I got mugged when I lived out in New York City, a month and a half after I moved there. I’d gone out there with a bag and a guitar playing in subways and small venues. I ended up in KC because my family was here,and it was a chance for me to recoup until I found my home, and then I found my band here.
 
The Deli:  What could make the KC music scene better?
 
Nathan: Where are the people coming out to the shows? There are amazing bands here. It’s a tragedy that so few people are at the clubs Monday through Thursday. There are shows that don’t go too late for people who have to work and most places aren’t charging covers.
 
Bill Sturges: There are so many beautiful, amazing, crazy things going down every single night in Kansas City,and it just takes what one step out the door to find it.
 
Liam Sumnicht: I agree people need to come out more. I also think typically people don’t care about what’s happening in their own backyard unless other people care. It’s caddy of me to say, but people will pay attention when they know people in LA like [KC music]. It’s natural.
 
The Deli: Why should people see Not A Planet live?
 
Bill: We lay it down. We try to remove all barriers so [the audience] can enter into a different world. Because the reality you experience during the week doesn’t play into the show. There’s an energy that we try to put in, and we accomplish it. We put everything we have on the table. Come watch us crumble and rise again.
 
The Deli: How often are you are tour?
 
Liam: We do around 100 shows a year. We have been out for weeks at a time to Florida and the East Coast. And regionally we’re out almost every weekend.
 
Bill: Anywhere from St. Louis, to Manhattan, to Joplin, to Wichita, to Oklahoma.
 
Nathan: [Not a Planet] only plays in Kansas City about once a month, not including cover shows.
 
The Deli: Wait. What cover shows?
 
Nathan: We have a separate cover band with the same members. It’s called Ragged Heirs. We try to keep it upbeat and timely. We play…
 
Everyone: Beatles, Simon and Garfunkel, Foster the People, Kings of Leon, Bo Diddley, Robert Johnson, Tom Waits, all the stuff that grooves a little bit.
 
The Deli: Does touring hinder producing new material?
 
Nathan: It makes it hard.
 
Liam: But it also keeps you in good shape musically. It’s a double-edged sword. It keeps you on your toes, but takes away time from being able to write music.
 
Bill: In our lives we find things that we have to do, and the things that we love. In this room, we all understand that sometimes for the things we love, we have to carve out time. Two weeks [on tour] is beautiful because you get your feet wet. Three weeks is a marathon. We’ve talked to people like us who have been out for two months or longer. It gets treacherous at that point; it’s almost survival mode.
 
The Deli: What’s your favorite kind of audience?
 
Liam: The audience that gets it. When you can connect with people, that’s the most amazing and beautiful part of playing live.
 
Bill: I started playing music because I got the goose bumps sometimes in [high school] band and stuff. That’s the music reaching out and touching your soul. That’s why we continue to do it.
 
Nathan: Mostly I’m in it for the money and the women. [laughs]
 
The Deli: Speaking of money…
 
Bill: We make so much money.
 
Liam: Rollin! Sometimes at night we just pour our hundreds into a bathtub and all crawl in and take a bath.
 
Jodie: We go to McDonald’s and don’t order off the dollar menu.
 
Nathan: We get on a diving board to jump into our pool of money and swim around in it.
 
Bill: But in all seriousness, none of us have ever made money off of Not A Planet, but Not A Planet makes money; I’ve never had to pay [out of pocket] for gas, or vans; I’ve traveled across the US for free.
 
Nathan: Not A Planet is self-sustaining. It has paid for us to make records and go on tour, which costs thousands of dollars.
 
The Deli: Jodie, what’s your role in Not A Planet?
 
Jodie: Tour manager, director of media, photographer. I field the shows and make sure the band is on time. I do so much sometimes I can’t remember it all. It’s a fulltime job. I came on about 2 years ago. I saw them open for another band I was working for at the time, and I was hooked. I was supposed to move to California, but I moved back to KC and wondered what I was going to do. I remembered [Not A Planet], and two weeks later I was with in the band and going to Florida.
 
Are you working on a second album?
 
Nathan: We’re working on music. A second album is a twinkle in our eyes right now.
 
Not A Planet is:
Nathan Corsi: guitarist, singer, wordsmith
Liam Sumnicht: drums, vocals
Bill Sturges: bass, vocals
Jodie Platz: tour manager
 
Hannah Copeland
 
Hannah Copeland is a UMKC business student and self proclaimed "Fun Engineer". She books concerts for local bands every month, is working on an e-commerce music merchandise start-up, and is a lyricist and singer for her electronic band, Hunter Gatherer. She cannot wait to graduate next spring and work in radio broadcasting, music promotions, or bartending in South America. You can contact her at HeyHannahCopeland@gmail.com.
 
 
Not A Planet takes the stage again this Saturday at VooDoo Lounge, alongside St. Joseph’s Eyelit and Joplin’s Me Like Bees. Show starts at 9 p.m. Facebook event page.
 
 
New England

Boston Calling Recap: Magic Man and Tigerman WOAH! Live Up to the Hype

Posted on:

For the third time in almost a year, tens of thousands of eager concert-goers gathered in downtown Boston for one of the newest (and arguably most well-received) New England-based musical events in recent memory. Nearly 60,000 people showed up over three days for this spring’s Boston Calling festival, giving locals Magic Man and Tigerman WOAH quite an impressive welcome to the big stage. Click here to read the rest of the review (and view additional show photos).

 

 

 

NYC

Dead Tenants play The Deli’s B.E.A.F./Northside Punk Rock Stage on 06.12 at Silent Barn

Posted on:

Muffled noise rockers Dead Tenants from Queens sound a little like Black Flag with an experimental edge. Their debut self-titled EP, which just dropped in April, is a jumble of twisting guitar riffs, melodramatic vocals, and loud noises. They’re set to play  The Deli’s B.E.A.F./Northside Punk Rock Stage on 06.12 at Silent Barn with Big Ups, Lost Boy ? and many others. Listen to their track "Syntax" via their Bandcamp below. – Michael Haskoor (@Tweetskoor)

NYC

The Bumper Jacksons’ Sweet Mama, Sweet Daddy, Come In

Posted on:

Bumper Jacksons‘ new album Sweet Mama, Sweet Daddy, Come In is a pleasant surprise. The traditional swinging jazz brings to mind the indisputably dancing that took place in speakeasies throughout the country. Saying that Bumper Jacksons have a full band may be an understatement. Their full band consisting of clarinet, washboard, vocals, kazoo, trombone, guitar, mouth horn, bass, harmony vocals, snare, pedal steel and dobro drums, more trombone, and a suitcase. Yes, a suitcase. The band’s very own Dan Cohan created his own percussion setup around a suitcase with a washboard, tin can and old pieces of trash that make interesting sounds. –Hannah Brady

Portland

Live Review: Radiation City and Friends 5.21

Posted on:

When awesome local bands are friends, powerhouse bills can come together like the one that took place at the Doug Fir Lounge last Wednesday night. Featuring Radiaton City, Sama Dams, and Wishyunu, it was an overall sexy lineup. During Rad City’s set, singer Lizzy Ellison even admitted they try to make songs you’d want to have sex to. 

Wishyunu opened to a pretty solid Wednesday night crowd, playing their loop-heavy electronic pop/rock. All set long smooth and beautiful vocals swirl over the hard-hitting drums. It’s always wonderful to hear how dynamic the duo is with layering and peeling back sounds throughout their songs.

Sama Dams’ set revels in the chaos and noise–bits of soul and pop mashed in with the ever-present math rock. Their powerful vocals, intricate beats, and heavily featured organ remind me of a gospel inspired version of Radiohead or maybe Dirty Projectors.

By the time Radiation City took the stage, Doug Fir was packed. A crowd full of eager fans cheered as the band opened up with a familiar tune from 2012’s Cool Nightmares. While there were plenty of jams everyone could sing along to, the band also debuted a handful of brand new soul-packed swing/pop songs from the new album they’re currently recording. Think modern, sexy James Bond theme-songs, where classic groove meets sexy futuristic synth sounds. I hope we can all find the time to get laid listening to Rad City’s new album once it’s out, it’ll be the right thing to do. Also, shout out to drummer Randy Bemrose, who played despite having a broken elbow, wearing a sling and all. You couldn’t tell from listening to the set.

Chandler Strutz