NYC

SATE unveils new video for “Know My Name” + plays CMW on 05.04

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Toronto’s soul rock queen SATE, winner of our recent Best of Toronto 2015 poll for emerging artists, just released this new video for single "Know My Name," which confirms the lady’s undeniable power and talent. Don’t miss her next show at Lee’s Palace during CMW on May 4th, after which she will leave for a brief East Coast tour that will take her also to NYC.

San Francisco

Slow Motion Cowboys Album Release + B-Stars & Indianna Hale – 4/21

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We´re excited to share the news of the upcoming Slow Motion Cowboys, The B-Stars and Indianna Hale show at Rickshaw Stop on Thursday, April 21st!

My ode to Pete of Slow Motion Cowboys: Pete Fields is one of my favorite people, one of the best songwriters in the Bay Area, and he is one of my oldest friends in SF. Slow Motion Cowboys was a side project when I met Pete back in 2004, a band he started in college in Olympia and occasionally revisited after returning to SF. It’s been incredible to watch them grow as a musical entity. When I first moved to SF, I went to tons of Trainwreck Riders shows (a country/punk band that Pete also is in). He’s got the music community thing down, and as an SF native, his songs really bring out the spirit of this city, and his new album addresses some of those changes many of us our mourning, but in the most authentic way. I’m grateful he’s stuck around and continues to make art despite challenging times.

Now Slow Motion Cowboys are bringing it to the next level and are on the brink of releasing a new album, In Exile/ On the Mesa. After all these years, I am honored to be working on their big album release show, with help from my friend and collaborator, Joe Deakins, through Seaweed Sway. 

Joe made an excellent radio mix of Slow Motion Cowboys, The B-Stars, and Indianna Hale. Here it is:

 

We also planned it to fall right around Pete’s birthday, so this is a double-celebration, if anyone’s keeping track. Pete’s real birthday is Friday (tax day ahhh). – Jessie Woletz, Seaweed Sway

Nashville

Deli Premiere: Laurel & The Love-In unveils “Gonna Do” ahead of summer album release

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Modern bands going for a classic rock sound have a tendency to stop short in one of two ways. They strip the soul from it by aping their influences only and forgetting about the place where it all started—the blues—or they stick too tightly to those bluesy roots and ignore decades of musical growth and innovation. Laurel & the Love-In bring the best of both worlds with "Gonna Do," the lead single off the upcoming summer sizzler Don’t Love Nobody. Rootsy as it gets but not stiflingly so, "Gonna Do" hits the highs with grace and dips low and easy only to blossom back into a spirited outro, all the while driving forward with the determination and experience of several different generations. We’re thrilled to debut the track below, and we encourage you to keep watch for Don’t Love Nobody when it releaes later this year. –Austin Phy

Philadelphia

New Track: “About A Girl” (Nirvana Cover) – Beach Slang

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Here is a new cover of "About A Girl" by Philly’s own Beach Slang. It was recorded for Doused In Mud, Soaked In Bleach, a tribute album to Nirvana’s Bleach, which was released this past weekend by Robotic Empire for Record Store Day and also includes contributions from Circa Survive, Young Widows, Daughters and many others. Beach Slang will be kicking off a national tour this week that will wrap up with a homecoming show on Saturday, May 21 at Union Transfer, before the gang heads off to Primavera Sound. (Photo by Nicole Mago)

Philadelphia

Beyond The Bars Fundraiser w/The Districts, Hop Along’s Frances Quinlan & More at WCL April 17

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World Cafe Live is hosting a fundraiser for Beyond The Bars, featuring rising local artists such as The Districts and Hop Along’s Frances Quinlan. All ticket sales will benefit the Beyond The Bars program, which provides musical education and instruments for incarcerated youth in Greater Philadelphia. The program seeks to empower these disadvantaged young men and women by equipping them with an outlet for creative expression and a sense of agency while they grapple with the frequently disorienting and dissociative bureaucracy of the criminal justice system. In support of this righteous cause, The Districts will take to the stage on Sunday evening with their universally adored, weary-plodding folk-pop/rock. Frances Quinlan will jolt you awake with her electric and hugely dynamic voice. Also pitching in for the cause will be Lushlife (DJ Set), Queen of Jeans, Ben Arnold, Milton, and The Bul Bey. World Cafe Live, 3025 Walnut St, 4pm, $20, All Ages. – Bryce Woodcock

Philadelphia

Cinedelphia Film Festival Presents Chic-A-Go-Go Live Taping w/The Dead Milkmen & Bunny Sigler at PhilaMOCA April 16

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Our friends at Cinedelphia Film Festival/PhilaMOCA have been doing another amazing job this year with their programming and events. This afternoon, they will be bringing us Chicago’s favorite public access family dance party Chic-A-Go-Go. There will be a live taping of the show with special guests local punk legends The Dead Milkmen and Bunny Sigler, followed by a screening and discussion of highlights from the shows 20-year history, which has featured such incredible and diverse acts such as The Cramps, The Slits, ? and the Mysterians, Sonic Youth, Frank Black, Daniel Johnston and many more. Parents are encouraged to bring their children to this afternoon’s event – preferably in costumes of their liking. Ha…"Punk Is Dad." PhilaMOCA, 531 N. 12th St., 2pm doors/2:30pm taping/3:30pm retrospective, $5 (Sold Out), All Ages – Alexis V.

NYC

The Bones of J.R. Jones celebrates release of LP ‘Spirit’s Furnace.’ tonight (04.15) at Mercury

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One of the most interesting and original NYC artist playing old timey sounding music, Jonathon Linaberry’s The Bones of J.R. Jones will be celebrating the release of its sophomore full length ‘Spirit’s Furnace’ with a show at the Mercury Lounge tonight April 15th. New single "Hammers and Nails" (streaming) reproduces his signature stomping sound, which originates from the fact that the man is his own band: you can’t play much more than a four on the floor kick, while playing a couple of other instruments and singing. A disciple of 20th Century Folk and Blues artists like Blind Lemon Jefferson and Lightnin’ Hopkins, Linaberry blends those influences with his early passion for hardcore punk, delivering an alternative version of roots music that’s dark and edgy enough to feel at home both in a Manhattan bar and in a DIY Brooklyn venue. 

Nashville

Steve Wood Music’s “Transformation” is a look into the eye of the robot

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Tasteful in its execution, Steve Wood Music’s debut Transformation is a well-rounded retrofuturistic voyage that avoids all the indulgences that lead to cheesy electronic music. It’s dancy but not robotic, retro but not novel, emotional but not saccharine. There’s an element of Tame Impala brand psych to be found in there as well, floating hand-in-hand with the textured synths and delayed vox in Wood’s chosen space somewhere between lofi and stereo recording. Get a taste of the future right now and stream the album below. –Austin Phy

Philadelphia

Weekend Warrior, April 15 – 17

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On Saturday, Free Cake For Every Creature celebrates the arrival of their LP Talking Quietly of Anything With You, via Double Double Whammy, with a release show at Girard Avenue DIY space/batting cages, Everybody Hits. The Katie Bennett-led crew explores the daily adjustments that often characterize finding one’s place as an emerging adult, while adapting to a new place. With an invigorating sense of spoken/sung sincerity, united by a jovial, similarly straightforward sense of instrumentation, the songs’ endearing relatable stories come across loud and clear, while their hushed vocal quality entrusts the listener. Cut from a like-minded cloth Carmen Perry, a.k.a. Addie Pray, hits you with a dose of intimate adventure, while the uninhibited, melodic poetry of Hello Shark aches and empowers, flipping the script on self-awareness. The experimental folk of Microsoft Saint completes the local bill. Everybody Hits, 529 W. Girard Ave., 8pm, $7, All Ages – Michael Colavita

 
More places to enjoy this weekend…
 
Everybody Hits (529 W. Girard Ave.) FRI Hound
 
Johnny Brenda’s (1201 N. Frankford Ave.) SAT Sonnder (Record Release), Wild Rompit, The Loud Company
 
Boot & Saddle (1131 S. Broad St.) FRI The Humble, Something Like A Monument, SUN Frim Sleepers, Howlish, Lady Parts, King Azaz, Blacksalt
 
Kung Fu Necktie (1250 N. Front St.) FRI Dopestroke/Half-Ton of Humanity, SAT Hellrad/DJ PHSH, Mr. Sonny James, SUN Caliph-NOW (Listening Party)/Clamfight, Black Urn
 
PhilaMOCA (531 N. 12th St.) SAT Chic-A-Go-Go Live Taping: Dead Milkmen, Bunny Sigler
 
Bourbon & Branch (705 N. 2nd St.) FRI Hambone Relay, Visoon, The Once Was
 
Union Transfer (1026 Spring Garden St.) FRI Crypt Sermon, SAT Horrendous
 
The Trocadero (1003 Arch St.) FRI Sacred Cube (CD Release), Sullivan’s Box, Gape, SAT Making-Out With Medusa, Sonorous, Dreams Of Demise, The Coochie Melters
 
World Café Live (3025 Walnut St.) FRI (Upstairs) A Tribute to The Beatles in Celebration of the 50th Anniversary of Revolver: Mason Porter, Reverend TJ McGlinchey Band, Lovers League, Man About a Horse, Hurricane Hoss
The Late Saints, Railroad Fever, The Newspaper Taxis, Polkadelphia, No Good Sister, Michael Fitch, SAT (Downstairs) Rockin’ Docs for Diabetes Cure/(Upstairs) Minas, SUN (Downstairs) Beyond the Bars Fundraiser: The Districts, Frances Quinlan, Ben Arnold, Milton, Queen of Jeans, The Bul Bey
 
 The Fire (412 W. Girard Ave.)  FRI The Stammer, Vulcans, The Upticks, Lapses, SAT (6pm) L.A.W., Condition Oakland/(9pm) No Good Sister, SUN Jet Set Sail, Pocket
 
MilkBoy Philly (1100 Chestnut St.) SAT Nik Greeley & The Operators, Johnny Showcase & The Mystic Ticket, Darla, Muscle Tough
 
Ortlieb’s Lounge (847 N. 3rd St.) FRI Grandchild, SAT EX. By V., SUN Louie Louie
 
Silk City (435 Spring Garden St.) FRI Bo Bliz, Low Budget, SAT DJ Deejay
 
Fergie’s (1214 Sansom St.) SUN Rusty Cadillac
 
Connie’s Ric Rac (1132 S. 9th St) FRI Looseleaf, Max Morning-Height, SAT Paths 2 Glory, Popular Creeps, Foreword to the End
 
Voltage Lounge (421 N. 7th St.) FRI Suburban Murder, Generation, Empty, Ashes of Our Sins
 
Frankie Bradley’s (1320 Chancellor St.) FRI Paul T, Sean Hearn, SAT Ed Christof
 
The Fillmore Philadelphia (1100 Canal St.) FRI August Burns Red, Left to Vanish. SAT Dr. Dog
 
The Foundry (1000 Frankford Ave.) FRI Cold Roses, Thee Idea Men, SUN Foxtrot & the Get Down
 
The Grape Room (105 Grape St.) FRI Argonautic, Flotel, SAT Lion Powda, Danny Newport, Run to Sandy, Backroom Dreamers
 
Ardmore Music Hall (23 E. Lancaster Ave.)  FRI Splintered Sunlight, SAT David Uosikkinen’s In The Pocket, SUN Jontourage
 
First Unitarian Church (2125 Chestnut St.) SAT Roger Harvey
 
Goldy’s (723 Chestnut St., #3) SAT Joy Again, Kississippi, Dominic Angelella
 
Repo Records (536 South St.) SAT Grayscale, Sad Actor, The Whips, Point Breeze Country Club, Worst Ones
 
Creep Records (1050 N. Hancock St., Suite 76) SAT Pocket, Left& Right, Thin Lips, Goddamnit
 
The Farm (Please contact one of the acts or venue for more info.) SAT Dopestroke, The Charley Few, Trash Knife, The Dolts
Portland

Guest post: Photographer Aaron Sharpsteen recalls the April 9th show at the Palace

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*photo of San Lorenzo by Aaron Sharpsteen. Other photos from the night can be found on the Deli Portland Facebook page.

The string of beautiful days and nights stirred something, a desire to attend the basic foundation of local underground music: the word-of-mouth house show. There was a time when I was attending these on a regular basis in Portland, years ago…but as it always happens, people move, houses are sold to different people, and I didn’t keep up with the who/what/when/where of it all.

How lucky then was I to find out about one of these shows while attending another, and not only that, but right down the street (literally 6 blocks away) from my deep SouthEast apartment. Armed with a bottle of root-beer schnapps and some cheap beer, I made my way over to a stranger’s house to catch some tunes.

 

The first band of the evening was so called “Russian surf act” Kozyol. The project seems to be the brainchild of Davey Zilban, who plays guitar and sings in Russian, slinging a mash-up of vaguely folksy-sounding surf that was the perfect start to a party. Nothing too aggressive or abrasive, but certainly nothing too relaxed or laid-back, Kozyol hit the perfect tempo and got bodies moving immediately. I knew it was going to be a good night.

 

Next up was Dim Wit, in this iteration a two-piece with Zilban moving back to drums and Jeff Tuyay moving up to sing and play guitar. Dim Wit is obviously a play on words, as I found the lyrics quite witty and compelling, and Tuyay very charming and natural as a lead man. There’s something pleasing about a minimalist set-up that can crank out well-written but unconventional songs and keep it interesting, and Dim Wit did just that. They also somehow stirred the young folks (yes, I am old enough to say that) into some light moshing by the end.

 

Absolutely no offense to any of the other bands who played, but the night belonged to The Super Secret Hot Girls Club, who threw down what might have been one of the best house-show performances I’ve seen in quite a while. After two more traditional rock acts they turned up the noise and upped the tempo, with an energetic front-man who had the entire room in the palm of his hand.

 

Unfortunately there was a casualty, as it appeared one of the more energetic participants slammed into a wall and left a gigantic, body shaped hole. By this point the root beer schnapps and cheap beer was completely gone and so was I, and it was great.

 

Closers San Lorenzo were obviously the most polished, “professional” bands of the evening (check them out, they have shows coming up all over town in the next month or so) but the crowd was a little thinned out, possibly because of the relative age of the audience and perhaps because the people who slammed into the wall dipped the fuck out instead of doing the decent thing and sticking around to take responsibility for their mistakes. Seriously. My ears were still ringing from The Super Secret Hot Girls Club but San Lorenzo ended the night well with a solid performance.

 

After the quality that I witnessed on Saturday, it’s safe to say that I plan on attending many more of these soirees over the next few months. Hope to see you there, in the garden from which our underground music scene grows: the shady-looking house down the block with the music coming out of it.

 

Aaron Sharpsteen is a photographer and swell dude based in Portland, Or. 

 

 

 

Nashville

Kristoff Waltz plays Rites of Spring tonight (4.15), we sat down with them for an interview

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We took notice of Kritoff Waltz way back in February when their debut EP The Innocents dropped. Not only has the EP kept a place in our rotation since (they won our band of the month poll for early April, after all), but others have been taking notice as well. Kristoff Waltz came out on top in a battle of the bands to play at Vanderbilt’s annual on-campus music fest Rites of Spring. Last week we sat down and had a chat with Kristoff Waltz to get to know them a little better. Check out our interview and be sure to see them tonight at Rites of Spring.