Posts Tagged ‘Philadelphia’

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This Audiotree Live session we recorded on 6/27/16 in Chicago, IL  Full session video and audio can be purchased on itunes or bandcamp and streamed on spotify . I believe this to the most accurate portrayal of what our band does, currently. There’s a part where we discuss the concept of “weird” and whatever that is. It’s just a level of freedom achieved by being yourself and not caring if people like or dislike that, that’s pretty much the only thing I would encourage people to do and something I’m learning myself. Do it, as long as it is constructive and doesn’t harm another (unless it’s constructive). The “world” aka “america” is fucking psychotic, it isn’t real, make your own world and revel in it everyday then share it, let other people come in and say “what’s up? i like what you’ve done with the place.” Then pretty soon you are the president of your own universe that will go relatively untouched outside of the small things that keep you functioning in society. The whole world is inside you not the other way around. Anyway, thank you, keep on crushing it.

Ron Gallo performs on Audiotree Live, June 27th, 2016.

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Ron Gallo is a rock and roll trio lead by a tall, big-haired weirdo of the same name. As the former frontman of Toy Soldiers, Gallo spent a decade as a fixture in the burgeoning Philadelphia music scene. Now solo, Gallo is completing his second full-length record “Heavy Meta”. Embracing his love for fuzz, psych, garage, and early punk, Heavy Meta is a stark contrast to the “Harry Nilsson-meets-Father John Misty” sound of the previous record RONNY.

After undergoing a shattering year of love, loss, purging, and a musical reinvention, Gallo sought a change of scenery and a fresh start. Drawn to the rock ‘n’ roll music currently being made by his friends in back alleys of Tennessee’s “Music City,” Gallo and his very own record label American Diamond Recordings relocated to the Bordeaux neighborhood of Nashville on New Years Day 2016.

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Throughout his career, Toy Soldiers and solo combined, Gallo has released three full length records and three EPs working with various small independent labels in Philadelphia and New York City. He has shared the stage with legends such as Wanda Jackson, Dr. Dog, Deer Tick, Dr. John, The Walkmen, J. Roddy Walston, among others. Gallo has previously been featured among USA Today’s “Bands to Watch,” Paste Magazine’s “Philly Bands You Should Listen to NOW” and has garnered appearances on PBS SUN Studio Special, Daytrotter, Audiotree, and many more.

On stage, Gallo is a force to be reckoned with. He is a true showman with a knack for grabbing the audience’s attention and leaving them in awe. He sings his ass off and thinks it’s important to laugh at yourself.

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Image result for sheer mag

Over the past three years Sheer Mag have made their name with blistering punk anthems raw enough to ignite your very soul. Now the band have announced they’re releasing a compilation record of all their work to date.

Collecting together their first three EPs (appropriately titled I, II, and III), all of which were recorded using the same vintage 8-track tape machine, the compilation EP is only just the beginning.

Not only is a return to the UK and Europe for live shows expected this summer, but a long-awaited full length debut album is also expected for later this year. Sheer Mag’s compilation EP is released via Static Shock Records on 31st March.

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Sheer Mag, is
ian, tina, hart, kyle, matt,

recorded at the nuthouse and clownhouse II by hart seely

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When issued with the challenge of cranking out a new single of “Nothing But The Jams,” Jason Henn (aka Honey Radar) certainly delivered. Chock full of hits and (possibly?) his best single to date, “Ignore The Bells” is the second in what is hopefully a long series of EPs for Chunklet Industries.

Not sure if it’s layered solo work or a group or what, but it’s great short pop spasms owing equal debts to early New Zealand’s groups and Guided by Voices.”
Honey Radar sound like a low-budget Clientele, all major-key arpeggios somewhere between psych and Felt.
Honey Radar... was one of the more eccentric acts to play during the festival. The band harnessed the feedback and fuzz of their instruments for a cacophony of sounds, and the band’s two guitarists clashed their guitars together in a sword fight.”

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The much-anticipated 7″ on Slumberland from this promising Philadelphia jangle pop/dreampop band with vocals from Sarah Schimineck accompanied by members of several notable indie bands. Philly indiepop (members of Literature, Little Big League, Pet Milk)

Few people hit the spot quite like Mercury Girls. Just give them 2min of your time to win you over. It’ll happen. Two absolutely stunning singles of c86-style indie pop.  Shiny, fuzzy, and intricately decorated. Can not wait for more music from this band

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New 2016 version of their previous jangly dream pop demo with extra live songs added and now available offsite on limited cassette from Endless Daze. Mercury Girls were great at Austin and should have a big year

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A power duo of singer-guitarist Isaac Clark and drummer Josh Glauser, Honeytiger is one of the best new Philadelphian rock bands to catch our ear lately and one of the first in a while that didn’t get its start in the house show scene. The band debuted this year with Half Clean, a fierce collection of power pop Black Keys-y blues explosions, but with a broad reaching sense of hooks. Case in point: the album opener “As It Will Happen,” a swaggery pop masterpiece of modern rock.

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purling hiss

We’re highlighting new music from Philadelphia’s Purling Hiss , so get ready to rock out with lots of fuzzed guitars.

The trio released their new album recently  “High Bias” this past Friday. They’re a band that seems to keep a steady stream of material flowing, as this marks their third record for Drag City in just four years. And yet they never feel thrown together or haphazard – everything Mike Polizze and comany put to tape is patiently coaxed out of a collection of years-old riffs and spur-of-the-moment jams. For its part, “Fever” showcases Hiss’ layered, full sound that is still nuanced. We get scuzzy guitars and a barrage of percussion right out the gate, with Polizze’s garage-fi vocals slinking in amidst howls and solos.

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Bruce Springsteen, Danny Federici and Clarence Clemons of the E Street Band (1975) | via http://songmango.com/new-release-bruce-live-in-philly-1975/

Of the dozens of Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band shows in Philly over the years, many are legend. The Main Point shows from 1973-1975 that earned the rocker high marks in Philly, one of the first cities around the country that embraced his music. Then there are the four shows he played at the Tower Theatre – December 27, 28, 30, 31 – in 1975 that were epic.

Bruce Springsteen played two shows at the Tower in November 1974, but fans would have to wait 13 months to see him again in Philly. On December 27, 28, 30 and 31, 1975, Bruce and the band took over the Tower Theatre for four absolutely stunning shows. It had been a little more than two years since Bruce released The Wild, The Innocent and the E Street Shuffle, and nine months before the release of Born To Run, even though songs like the title track, “Tenth Avenue Freeze Out,” “She’s The One,” “Jungleland,” and “Backstreets” had become set list staples by the time he returned to Philly in 1975.

setlist

01. Night
02. 10th Avenue Freeze Out
03. Spirit In The Night
04. Does This Bus Stop At 82nd Street?
05. Its My Life
06. She’s The One
07. Born To Run
08. Its Gonna Work Out Fine
09. Growin’ Up
10. Saint In The City
11. Backstreets
12. Mountain Of Love
13. Jungleland
14. Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)
15. 4th Of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)
16. Detroit Medley
17. Thunder Road
18. Wear My Ring Around Your Neck
19. Quarter To Three
20. For You
21. Twist and Shout / Killer Joe

Grubby Little Hands is the woozy, psychedelic pop project of Philly-based songwriters and multi-instrumentalists Donnie Felton and Brian Hall, who began collaborating in college as music theory and composition students. As a duo, they released two albums: Imaginary Friends (2009) and The Grass Grew Around Our Feet (2012). Leading up to their forthcoming third record Garden Party (2016), guitarist Joseph Primavera and drummer Chad Brown were added to the lineup, significantly enriching the sound palette. On Garden Party, the band use tuneful melodies, densely layered guitar and synth textures, and tight rhythmic foundations to create an amalgam of pop songwriting, paisley psychedelia, and vibrant avant-rock. This is packaged into songs that range from stadium-ready anthems and buoyant surf-rock to whispering lullabies and contemplative deep-cuts, making for a dynamic and mercurial listening experience.

Conceptually, much of Garden Party’s lyrics are rooted in an existential anxiety that Felton and Hall experience on both a macro and micro level. The ever-looming- but-never- arriving imminent doom of civilization that pervades 21 st century mass media and internet culture leaves Felton and Hall with a seemingly distant or apathetic perspective. Album opener Dial Tone fantasizes about a hypothetical party where no people are present but automated technology goes through the motions nonetheless. Don’t Shoot Straight describes catastrophic destruction from the perspective of theater patrons who are humored by the apocalypse that’s unfolding before their eyes. But Felton and Hall have a very personal appreciation for their own mortality, as victims of separate cases of random violence that left them near-death. Felton was once beaten unconscious by a group of young men in a case of mistaken identity, and this incident is referenced in the track Michael. Years later in 2008, during production of their first album, Hall was stabbed in the abdomen with a 12” hunting knife by a complete stranger in center city Philadelphia in an unprovoked attack. He narrowly survived, and his attacker was convicted of attempted murder and imprisoned. So as album closer We Don’t Exist explores various afterlife theories, accepting and ultimately embracing the inevitable end, there is clearly a personal significance underlying the bigger picture being painted.

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As evidenced from their LP also from this year, Philadelphia’s Honey Radar seem to have piles of these killer lo-fi jams. A huge hit in my alternate universe. When issued with the challenge of cranking out a single of “nothing but the jams,” Jason Henn (aka Honey Radar) certainly delivered. Chock full of hits and (possibly?) his best single to date, “Ignore The Bells” is the second in what is hopefully a long series of EPs for Chunklet Industries.

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with two eps of intriguing garage rock, a cut above the rest of that scene as it exists today at least by my measure, perhaps a hold over from last decade’s weirdo garage punk heyday riding out the very last ripples in rather impressive fashion or just unboxing dusty decade old demos, woven into these short n sweet quirky damaged pop tunes channeling obvious favorites – with influences of the VELVETS and STOOGES and SYD BARRETT by way of FLYING SAUCER ATTACK and GUIDED BY VOICES and SIMPLY SAUCER – tough to differentiate between “JASON HENN” and “HONEY RADAR” – i suspect/expect there isn’t a band – in any case, this is probably the closest anyone will ever get to filling the SIC ALPS shaped hole in my heart