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Recent Posts

  • Philly Music Showcase Does PhilaMOCA Tuesday Tune-Out in March
  • Pissed Jeans – “Bathroom Laughter” Video, Honeys Released Today
  • Weekend Picks: Johnny Brenda’s and PhilaMOCA
  • Listen to Nightlands’ “Nico”
  • War On Drugs New Years Eve at Johnny Brenda’s
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Category: Featured Articles

Philly Music Showcase Does PhilaMOCA Tuesday Tune-Out in March

  • February 19, 2013
  • Nikki Volpicelli
  • · Featured Articles
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We are pleased to announce that we will be curating next month’s Tuesday Tune-Out series at PhilaMOCA. Tuesday Tune-Out is an ongoing weekly series of music and movies in which a rotating lineup of guest curators choose a month’s worth of local bands, the bands in turn choose movies to screen.

This month, we’re bringing ambiance, instrumentals, post-punk, pop, power vocals and timeless, folk-tinged singer/songwriters to Tuesday nights, in this particular order:

March 5:
Edison brings dream-out dynamic melodies and spacious vocals
Mohican’s projecting original band footage over guitar-driven, atmospheric, post-rock instrumentals (check out the group’s newest EP, Honest Red, here)

March 12:
Point Breeze is a three-piece noise-core outfit hailing from its namesake
Amanda X, Philly girls’-only group belts outCorinne Tucker-like vocals and powers through powerful twee-punk
(plus film TBA)

March 19:
Younger Me: Eccentric, multi-instrumental pop-bop from York, PA
Cruiser, who released the Cruiser EP in 2012 with Youth Lagoon producer Jeremy Park. Think warm bodies on hazy, summer mornings; performing with found imagery from Andy States, founder and front man

March 26:
Heyward Howkins solo set featuring blustery vocals, plucky guitar riffs, and nostalgic songwriting
Auctioneer’s complex instrumental composition by Craig Hendrix, broad vocals, experimental fiction folk; performing w/ multi-screen video installation by Jesse Engaard and live video mixing by Chris Thomas

Doors at 7:30, Musician at 8:00-ish
$5 donation, All ages.

Pissed Jeans – “Bathroom Laughter” Video, Honeys Released Today

  • February 12, 2013
  • Nikki Volpicelli
  • · Featured Articles

“Bathroom Laughter” is the first single off the post-hardcore group’s newest (released today) album, Honeys. This video looks straight out of QVC hell.

Weekend Picks: Johnny Brenda’s and PhilaMOCA

  • February 3, 2013
  • Nikki Volpicelli
  • · Featured Articles

This weekend was one for shows. Friday night we checked out Norwegian Arms, Ahleuchatistas and Buke & Gase at Johnny Brendas. Saturday: The DRGN KING record release show with friends Idle Idols, Walking Shapes, Dangerous Ponies and at PhilaMOCA.

Pickup the new record, Paragraph Nights, over at the Bar/None Records online emporium (enter here).

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Listen to Nightlands’ “Nico”

  • February 1, 2013
  • Nikki Volpicelli
  • · Featured Articles

A raging, bull chase of a beginning, “Nico” has that dreaminess that’s signature Nightlands, but it’s like sleeping on speed and still sleeping peacefully. Check out the instrumental and vocals-only versions on Secretly Canadian YouTube.

War On Drugs New Years Eve at Johnny Brenda’s

  • January 1, 2013
  • Nikki Volpicelli
  • · Featured Articles
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Someone is selling two tickets for $30 outside of Johnny Brenda’s for the sold-out show. Inside, it’s maybe more packed than I’ve ever seen the venue. Party hats are on taps. Everyone knows each other. It seems that people keep ordering the same smoky bacon beer that I think is terrible. Paul Vile, Kurt’s little bro, is beaming over his at least 5 foot wood-enforced jello shot mosaic that reads “War On Drugs” in red, orange and green mold. He calls himself @jellomanphilly, go ahead and follow him on Instagram.

It’s a magically weird night. I couldn’t be happier spending my last few hours of 2012 at the same venue I’ve spent so much of 2012 in. Avery Rosewater belts out fuzzy shoegaze to introduce Purling Hiss, who’s performing new songs from the upcoming March release Water On Mars.

War On Drugs plays through midnight, holding off about five minutes before the midnight mark to go through an ambient stutter steeped in anticipation, breaking through it song-for-song come 2013, at which point frontman Adam Granduciel releases this monstrosity of a mold meal to the crowd with Vile at the helm, ripping off shots and throwing them into a pit of kind of confused people who  eat? shoot them anyway. The way the group is able to captivate a full house through a moment that’s historically reserved for screaming numbers down is mesmerizing and a fact. The Drugs’ craft a set sure to barrel on for hours, changing temperature, leveling songs with harmonica and trumpet parts. Granduciel stops to introduce friends, playfully put them down, and bring up jokes and jello. He asks for a Jersey crowd count before he group rages into a Springsteen song so that if like not before, based on the hand count, no one’s going smoking or bathrooming until the show is over.

Later on in 2013, when the show is over, the party hats once decorating the bar have all gone home with strangers. People are dragging glittery streamers which were shot out from the sky under their shoes. It looks like the most glamorous toilet paper accident ever. Short plastic solo cups are dead everywhere, half empty with chunks of green and red. The smoking section outside grows and shrinks as each gang of taxi cabs rounds the corner of Frankford and Girard Ave.

Good luck for the new year. Everyone wants it, everyone has their superstitions. Some say eating Chinese food helps, some say ham. I say if this show is any indication of the year in local music to come, we don’t have to eat.

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Editor’s Note: Saying Goodbye to 2012

  • December 31, 2012
  • Nikki Volpicelli
  • · Featured Articles
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It’s the end of 2012, or almost. It’s been a year full of things and stuff. I spent half of it on the West coast and another half on the East one. I started the year by ringing it in at a bar, red lipstick on, black something being worn, fake animal fur too. I’ll ring in this new one in similar fashion. 2012 was my first full year as a music journalist. I was hired, I was fired, and I started my own thing—the Philadelphia Area Music Showcase.

Starting your own thing is not at all hard. Sticking with it can definitely be. Finishing it, well if it’s good enough you hope you never have to. The thing is, whatever you set out to do, it’s going to turn different corners all the time. You might not recognize it years from now, it could be an entirely different species.

I started the Showcase under a misconception, but I didn’t know it at the time. I was in Portland, OR, a city that’s small but rich in music, lively all of the time, shows every night, side projects jutting out from every genre, friends of friends of friends playing together and supporting each other. I wondered why Philly wasn’t the same. Why there was so much competition. Why people didn’t work together more, pull each other up alongside themselves. I wanted to start a site that promoted Philly music in a collaborative sense, a place where we could put our best face out into the world and they would see it, believe it, look and listen to it. I wanted to show the world how rich this city is with sound.

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Looking back now, I feel silly and wrong.

Last summer, I thought that if I went to enough shows (I was shooting for three a night) and interviewed enough artists, I could truly bring to light this face. Well, going to three shows a night is absolutely ridiculous, but do you know what I found out by trying? It’s not for lack of options, or venues, or talent. It’s simply lack of time, money, and reliable transportation.

Last summer I thought the optimism I had was a little overboard, that I’d have a hard time convincing artists, studio owners, fans, writers, photographers, and everyone else in Philly that collaboration is key. That there’s no “I” in team. That we can get further by sticking together. Little did I know this was already way happening, with or without me. That I could go ahead and jump on the ship, and I could do so by asking questions, seeking out advisors, volunteering time, booking and promoting shows, being a media outlet, being part of the support system that’s keeping the local music scene afloat.

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Since last summer, I’ve seen live shows from countless amazingly talented local artists. I saw Man Man play  the 2nd Street Festival minutes after dumping my suitcases off at my new apartment. Slutever scream to a house party audience in a converted garage with a free nail art station set up outside. Ground Up and The Lawsuits perform one 90 degree night in the middle of Rittenhouse Park. Nightlands perform a renovated score of 2001: A Space Odyssey. Ron Gallo and Satellite Hearts and the Districts playing in a stranger’s living room for a So Far Sounds pop-up performance.

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And since last summer I’ve realized how completely together the Philadelphia music scene is. We’ve got the folks over at The Key picking up every little ember of music news and handing it back to us still hot, the JUMP team who understands the importance of printed word (and gives it to us for free!), the dudes running Out Of Town Films, who feature consistently exclusive, well produced video performances from natives and passer bys. And then there’s Sean Agnew, thank you. If there was no Union Transfer or First Unitarian Church, we’d be dismissing a large audience who’s not yet of legal age to booze.

This list is not comprehensive. There are so many different venues, organizations, individuals helping to make music accessible to Philadelphians. I am honored to be a participant and can only hope that the Philadelphia Music Showcase continues to grow, turn its corners, change species, and evolve alongside all of these folks. There is room for all of us here, and my hope for 2013 is that this crew of people only gets bigger and hungrier, and then bigger and hungrier than that.

Maybe even hungry enough to devour New York.

 

Sneak Peak: Pissed Jeans Perform a Track from Honey, February 12 Release

  • December 12, 2012
  • Nikki Volpicelli
  • · Featured Articles
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John Stish, NYC traitor, filmed Pissed Jeans performing a track from its upcoming album Honey, (due out February 12 on Sub Pop) during the raunch group’s Underground Arts show. This will be the Philly outfit’s first release since King of Jeans in 2009.

 

Drinking Cider with Southwork: Album Release Party at Johnny Brenda’s Dec. 13, 2012

  • December 12, 2012
  • Nikki Volpicelli
  • · Featured Articles
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There are three hard ciders and one hot peppermint tea on our table, also little blinky lights that are embedded into the wood and go through the color wheel in quick intervals. Kind of fitting as Southwork, the seven-piece South Philly psych-rock outfit that’s here sipping two hard ciders and one hot tea, is known for its eclectic, vibrant wardrobe and colorful showmanship. Also fitting that the group is playing upstairs at this very Johnny Brenda’s bar next week, celebrating the release of Arise, the group’s first release, although they’ve been playing together in various groups since they were 12 and 13-years-old.

“Growing up in South Philly, there were only a few kids into rock so we built a community around them. We figured if we’re all doing the same stuff, why not do it together?” says Mike Vivas, Southwork vocalist. The group gets its big band business from choir class. Vivas says being around that many musicians playing all at once and in harmony was practice for putting together Southwork, which includes an entire horn section with baritone and tenor saxophones and a trumpet player.

Listening to Arise, you sense that there’s classical training behind the mechanism. Carefully clustered horn intros make for a triumphant introduction on the title track, vocals are carefully put to highlight brass sounds (“My Demise”), and by track 4 (“Nice to Meet You”), you can taste the Beatles the guys’ must have consumed in their formative years. Tracks on the album, which each hold strong as individuals, find a way to bleed together in the proper way that’s often missed in the digital download, one-track mind world. It’s an album that’s best heard through and through or you will miss the nuances, the subtle similarities that string songs together.


A highlight (or low, depending on how you look) of their early performances included a show at the now defunct Aberlene’s, where the guys encouraged drummer Joe Smith to buy beer because he was 15-years-old, and the whole lot of ‘em got kicked out before they could play the show. The South Street venue is now a Dallas French Fry store. Grease where grease used to be. Potatoes where punk kids used to play.

The guys got to play Aberlene’s before the switch, thanks in part to a friend who ran Flash Mob Booking before “flash mob” was a Philadelphia taboo. These days, as individuals with tons of experience playing the circuit, everyone agrees that it’s good practice to limit local performances. Playing too often provides little time to come up with new material to offer the audience, so it’s a bunch of people in an audience singing along to your songs, knowing all of the words and ceasing to be surprised. And this is a band with a bubble machine. It’s into being surprising.

Still, having a home base in Philly is obviously important. Vivas and Anastasi spent almost two years living in LA, which was a confusing time, or so it sounds. (“There are no seasons. You have to go to Starbucks to figure it out, like, ‘oh, here’s a pumpkin latte, I guess it’s fall. Oh, peppermint mocha? I should probably call my mom and wish her Merry Christmas’,” says Anastasi.)


Then I ask them that question: what do you love about your hometown?

Food, mostly. Bahn Mi sandwiches come first, shitty $1 South Philly pizza, second, hoagies are third or fourth or both and being close to friends and family is on the list but probably would’ve been higher if it wasn’t dinner time.

After Thursday’s record release show, the group gears up for a five week East coast and in tour through D.C., Charleston and Atlanta and back up through Chicago and Columbia. In a gutted short bus.

“The bus is the baby of the band,” says Anastasi, “at least it gets most of the money.” He gets lit on talking about this vehicle, as the other guys kind of sit back and sip, watch. He tells me that after 10 years a school district is legally required to get rid of old road warriors, and that, for cheap, you can adopt. Those in the market are “mostly bands and tailgaters” he admits. If the band thing doesn’t work out, he’s convinced he could pass a driving test and take up a career as a middle school chaffer.

 

Q&A with Cold Fronts: Playing Kung Fu Necktie 12/12

  • December 12, 2012
  • Nikki Volpicelli
  • · Featured Articles · Uncategorized
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We spoke with Craig Almquist, lead singer of Cold Fronts, about the importance of participating in the local music industry, slimming down the group, and what we’ll be listening to next year. 

PAMS: You’ve been very busy lately, recording and doing live radio shows and the like. What’s your “to do” for the next month?

CF: This weekend we are going to start recording four new songs with Kyle “Slick” Johnson (Slutever, Creepoid, Wavves), who we’re really excited about. He’s worked on some of my favorite records and it’s super exciting. We also have some other songs that should be coming out the first week of January which we’re pumped about that we recorded with Converse at their studio in Brooklyn, and we’ve got some touring plans that we’re working out right now.

PAMS: Cold Fronts started out as a four-piece. How has it been different recording and performing and overall being in a duo?

CF: Alex and I generally have more control over decisions. Him and I agree on a lot of things and I think it just helps us work faster. It really has made performing a lot easier too because we’re playing with some super talented musicians who make recording and writing feel like a breeze. Even though the band has been moving pretty quickly over the past year, it felt like when we had other members in the group, it would really slow down decision making.

PAMS: “Also all music is free becaase we are nice guys but terrible business people.” – I quote. Why do you feel that it’s important to make sure all of your music is available for free?

CF: I find that even though we give away our music for free people still buy it. Or if they don’t buy it, they at least hear it. Recording can cost a lot of money but putting it up on Bandcamp or Spotify doesn’t really cost anything. And if that means more people hear it, fantastic. Eventually we’ll put our music out on a legitimate format and then we will charge our fans the bare minimum for it, but for now, by our t-shirts and come to shows.

PAMS: Tell me about the your relationship with Ton-Taun and The Suzan, the two groups you’ll be playing with this Wednesday. How did you get linked up?

CF: We played with The Suzan in New York City and they put on such a killer show that we had to put them on a show in Philly. They’re this all girl Japanese group that kind of remind me of Peter, Bjorn,  and John. They live in New York City but are from Tokyo. We know Ton-Taun through jamming for a while with the drummer, Ocko.  I also met the guitarist, Doug, at a bar and we’ve been talking about playing a show together for awhile.

PAMS: How important do you believe it is to have real friendships with fellow artists in Philly, to promote each other and work together to build a community?

CF: It’s really important. Alex and I spent the first year of the band booking shows with our friends at the Rathaus and we’d meet so many bands every week. Eventually the people we were meeting were helping us with shows or recording opportunities. I like the fact that the music industry is a social place. It takes place at bars, or parties. If you’re a shy person or anti-social, that’s going to hold you back. And if you’re selfish and only look out for yourself, no ones going to help you out.

PAMS: Name some fellow artists you feel Cold Fronts has a special relationship with like the one mentioned above.

CF: The Dangerous Ponies. I’ve known a lot of the people in that band for a while, some from other projects. But either way, a lot of people in the band have been super supportive and encouraging with my music. Evan got my old band recording time at Drexel when I first moved to Philly five years ago because he saw me play at a house show. The old bassist, Chris, is currently playing guitar with us. The dudes at Headroom are really awesome and let us park our van in their in space overnight when we’re too tired to unload our gear. Emily Pukis, she has played at The Rathaus and has hosted a few events we’ve thrown. She’s really productive and super creative. MewithoutYou was kind enough to take us on our first tour where we kind of learned the ropes.

Photo Recap: Work Drugs Record Release with Philly Music Showcase and AKA Music

  • December 9, 2012
  • Nikki Volpicelli
  • · Featured Articles
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Friday’s Work Drugs’ show was a huge success! We had a great time DIY-ing the sh*t out of everything, from donation boxes to outdoor signage to refreshments (PBR and Yuengling). Below are a few photos of the event.

Big thanks to: AKA Music, JUMP magazine, BITBY.TV, Kate Harrold Photography, the Mastering House, Meeme Choi, Paul Schneider, Mary Cait Durnin, Philebrity, and the nice lady giving out free ice skating coupons outside.

And most of all, thank you Work Drugs and everyone who came to enjoy the show!

Photo by Kate Harrold www.kateharrold.com

Photo by Kate Harrold www.kateharrold.com

Photo by Kate Harrold www.kateharrold.com

Photo by Kate Harrold www.kateharrold.com

Photo by Kate Harrold www.kateharrold.com

Photo by Kate Harrold www.kateharrold.com

Photo by Kate Harrold www.kateharrold.com

Photo by Kate Harrold www.kateharrold.com

Photo by Kate Harrold www.kateharrold.com

Photo by Kate Harrold www.kateharrold.com

Photo by Kate Harrold www.kateharrold.com

Photo by Kate Harrold www.kateharrold.com

photo by Kate Harrold www.kateharrold.com

photo by Kate Harrold www.kateharrold.com

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