Wednesday, August 23, 2023

Squirrel Flower - "Alley Light"

Photo by Alexa Viscius

Squirrel Flower (aka Chicago based artist Ella Williams) has been making indie folk for a while, but her latest singles show her moving in a more rock oriented direction. Last month's "Full Time Job" could best be described as neo-grunge. Her latest, "Alley Light," takes a step back a bit but is still a rock song. It has the anthemic feel of a Bruce Springsteen song backed by a wall of indie rock noise. It's quite removed from Williams' previous music, but it still fits right in with the albums that came before. It's a bit of an unexpected turn while still sounding like a song from Squirrel Flower.

Ella Williams says of her new single:

"This song is about the man in me, or a man who I love, or a man who is a stranger to me. The video references a neo-noir Chicago heist movie where they use this thermal metal contraption to cut into a safe. They run around the city making sparks fly and getting up to no good. I wanted to do all that."

You can watch the video for "Alley Light" below. Tomorrow's Fire is due out October 13 on Polyvinyl, and is available for pre-order here. For more on Squirrel Flower, check out the artist's website. Upcoming tour dates are below the video.


Thu. Aug. 24 - Chicago, IL @ Salt Shed $Thu. Oct. 19 - Detroit, MI @ Lager House %Fri. Oct. 20 - Cleveland, OH @ Beachland Tavern %Sat. Oct. 21 - Toronto, ON @ Monarch Tavern ~Sun. Oct. 22 - Pittsburgh, PA @ Bottlerocket Social Hall ~Tue. Oct. 24 - Boston, MA @ Brighton Music Hall &Thu. Oct. 26 - New York, NY @ Bowery Ballroom &Fri. Oct. 27 - Philadelphia, PA @ Ukie Club %Sat. Oct. 28 - Washington, DC @ DC9 &Sat. Nov. 4 - Bristol, UK @ Rough TradeSun. Nov. 5 - Brighton, UK @ The Hope and RuinMon. Nov. 6 - Leeds, UK @ Brudenell Social ClubTue. Nov. 7 - Manchester, UK @ GulliversThu. Nov. 9 - Edinburgh, UK @ Voodoo RoomsSat. Nov. 11 - London, UK @ Pitchfork Music Festival London - EartH (Downstairs)Mon. Nov. 13 - Paris, FR @ SupersonicWed. Nov. 15 - Rotterdam, NL @ V11Thu. Nov. 16 - Brussels, BE @ BotaniqueSat. Nov. 18 - Berlin, DE @ LarkSat. Jan. 20 - Minneapolis, MN @ 7th Street Entry ^Sun. Jan. 21 -  Omaha, NE @ Reverb Lounge ^Tue. Jan. 23 - Denver, CO @ Larimer Lounge ^Thu. Jan. 25 - Salt Lake City, UT @ Kilby Court ^Fri. Jan. 26 - Boise, ID @ The Shredder ^Sat. Jan. 27 - Portland, OR @ Mississippi Studios ^Mon. Jan. 29 - Seattle, WA @ Madame Lou’sWed. Jan. 31 - San Francisco, CA @ Bottom Of The Hill ^Fri. Feb. 2 - Los Angeles, CA @ Lodge Room *Sat. Feb. 3 - Santa Ana, CA @ Constellation Room *Sun. Feb. 4 - Phoenix, AZ @ The Rebel Lounge *Tue. Feb. 6 -  Austin, TX @ The Ballroom ∞Wed. Feb. 7 - Dallas, TX @ Club Dada ∞Thu. Feb. 8 -  Fayetteville, AR @ George’s Majestic Lounge ¢Fri. Feb. 9 - St. Louis, MO @ Blueberry Hill Duck Room ¢Sat. Feb. 10 - Nashville, TN @ Third Man Records - Blue Room ¢Mon. Feb. 12 - Atlanta, GA @ The Masquerade - Purgatory ¢Wed. Feb. 14 -  Carrboro, NC @ Cat’s Cradle - Back Room ¢Thu. Feb. 15 - Richmond, VA @ The Camel ¢Fri. Feb. 16 - Woodstock, NY @ Colony ¢Sat. Feb. 17 - Amherst, MA @ The Drake ¢ $ w/ Beach Bunny% w/ Truth Club~ w/ Merce Lemon& w/ Knifeplay^ w/ Goon* w/ Cryogeyser∞ w/ alexalone¢ w/ Greg Mendez

Phantom Ocean - "I'm With the Band"


"Spooky, bluesy grunge misfits from Salem" Phantom Ocean just released a brand new single. "I'm With the Band" is an indie rock song seeped in blues that was written by drummer/singer Sarah Moughan-Smith about her experiences in the music scene. It's a song that's as noisy as it is catchy. It's a lo-fi grunge/blues song, which doesn't sound like it would work until you think about it for a few seconds. It's a perfect sonic combination that drips with venom just as much as it makes you want to happily sing along. 

Sarah Moughan-Smith says of the new single:

“'I’m With the Band' is a pushback against the assumption that women are just 'with the band' and not full artists and people in their own right that, unfortunately, some people love to cling to.  I drew on my own experiences of not being respected and treated like eye candy, and the reactions I got when I finally stepped into my own and refused to let that happen anymore. 

You can listen to "I'm With the Band" below. The song is currently available via Bandcamp. For more on Phantom Ocean, check out the band on Instagram.

Say Goodbye to Summer and Hello to Autumn at Bellforge Arts Center


We've dropped the ball in telling you about the Bellforge Arts Center's line up this year, and for that we apologize. Located on the former grounds of the Medfield State Hospital (just visiting the site to see the old buildings is highly recommended), Bellforge "... nurtures community, creativity and self-expression through the arts." 

August closes out with three upcoming free with RSVP concerts. They have two Summer Sounds shows left: Thursday August 24 with Summer Cult and Senseless Optimism and Thursday August 31 with Dino Gala and Cape Crush! This Saturday is Flow at the 'Forge - Celebrating 50 Years of Hip-Hip which features performances from Brandie Blaze, SeeFour, and ExitFame. 

In September they switch things over to ticketed events. September 9 sees a performance by alt-rock legends Buffalo Tom. September 16 and 17 is the Commonwealth Fest, a two day festival curated by Cousin Stizz and featuring Supersmashbroz, Michael Christmas, Jiles of Van Buren, and many more. 

October moves back to free events on Saturdays. No word on line ups yet, but we'll keep an eye out for you!

For more information on Bellforge Arts Center and to RSVP for events, head over to their website.

Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Marem Ladson - "Rayo de Luna"

Photo by Arancha Brandon

Marem Ladson grew up in Spain listening to American pop and folk music. Now she's living in New York City and releasing her own version of both of those sounds. "Rayo de Luna" shows that off perfectly. For the first minute and a half, the song is just an acoustic guitar that still sounds a little pop. Once Ladson's vocals kick in, you're sure to be entranced. "Rayo de Luna" is such a simple song, but Ladson's vocals have such a lush quality to them. It's a gorgeous song that has a little bit of an unexpected edge for folk pop, but that's what makes this release from Marem Ladson impossible to resist. Sometimes the best beauty has a little bit of a rough edge to it.

Marem Ladson says of her new single:

I wrote 'Rayo de Luna' in June last year, just a few weeks after my move to New York. I was feeling very homesick, so I turned to old Spanish songs by artists like Soledad Bravo, Simón Díaz, Cecilia, and JeannetteI sought guidance on the moon, a steadfast presence of consistent and unwavering nature. Trying to figure out where I come from and what the future holds for me, the moon felt like a source of guidance, certainty, and reassurance in a moment when everything was changing.”

You can watch the video for "Rayo de Luna" below. Baby Light is due out September 1. For more on Marem Ladson, check out the artist on Instagram and Facebook.

Feeling Figures - "Across the Line"


Indie rock fans of a certain age are familiar with K Records and know you need to check out everything the label releases. Your new favorite K Records band will need to be Feeling Figures. The Montreal band just sound and feel like vintage K. Their latest single, "Across the Line," has that laid back, noisy, and trippy vibe the label has brought us for decades. It's just filled with swirling guitars and slacker style vocals. There has been a 90's indie rock revival as of late, but not too many bands sound like it could very well be a lost song from thirty years ago. "Across the Line" has the whole 90's band just discovered The Velvet Underground thing going on, and that's never been a bad thing.

You can listen to "Across the Line" below. Migration Magic is due out November 15 on K Records, and is available for pre-order through Bandcamp. For more on Feeling Figures, check out the band's Bandcamp.



Live Shows: In Between Days Festival, Veteran's Memorial Stadium, Quincy, MA 8/19/23



Towards the end of Modest Mouse's headlining set on Saturday night, Isaac Brock commented that he can normally ignore about half of the bands during a festival, but In Between Days just kept making him want to watch every band from the very start of the day. I ended up having the same experience. When I looked at the schedule, there were some bands I wasn't that familiar with or hadn't been able to get into previously, so I figured I'd have some downtime to casually eat some food from the food trucks, or play some free classic arcade games at the pop-up arcade, but instead for ten hours (ok, at one point I did stop to shove a quesadilla in my face for five minutes) I was just blown away watching band after band after band!

I got there a couple of minutes late, and Quincy's own Gypsy Moths were already rocking the Arbella Insurance stage. Their classic Boston garage rock set the stage for the festival perfectly without sounding anything like any of the other bands on the bill. We also got fantastic sets from other Boston area bands Paper Tigers (who opened up the main stage with a mind blowing set of mainstream alt-rock), Carissa Johnson, Dutch Tulips, and Shallow Pools. Carissa Johnson was great as always, and a crowd seemed to materialize out of nowhere once she started.

I planned to eat and play some arcade games during Fantastic Cat and Shallow Pools. I had never heard of Fantastic Cat, and from what I had heard, Shallow Pools have always been a bit too pop for me. But Fantastic Cat ended up sucking me in with their Americana tinged alt-rock. I kept thinking I'd walk away during the next song, and I just kept staying. I decided to watch a bit of Shallow Pools out of obligation to at least see everyone. As soon as they started playing, I was hooked. The band played a completely infectious set of dance songs that was completely irresistible live. This may very well end up becoming a Shallow Pools fan page if we're not careful.

Slothrust have always been a band I've liked but not loved. After Saturday, that has completely changed. The band was joined by Annie Hoffman from Weakened Friends on bass, and live they were just a force of nature. They seemed to be the first band of the day people came for, and I understand why. They played a set of noisy indie rock that bordered on pop, with Leah Wellbaum secretly being one of the most magnetic frontpeople in indie rock today. Plus, busting out an indie rock "Baby One More Time" is always welcome.

I've seen Weakened Friends more times than I can count, starting off when they were pretty much Boston's house band for 90's reunions coming through town. They have grown exponentially since then, and even though I typically prefer small club shows to festivals, it was great seeing them shine in a larger venue. They played a brand new song for the first time that could very well end up being their finest song to date. It was an intense and joyous set that felt like it accidentally ended a few minutes too early.

Somehow I had never seen Sunny Day Real Estate despite being a fan for decades. Turns out I waited too long. The emo legends were unbelievably tight, and just rocked out in front of a field of die hards. Every song in their playlist was a classic, but I forgot just how great "In Circles" was in particular. I had walked away before they finished to secure a space for The Beths (who were enjoying their space on stage to watch Sunny Day finish out) and had instant regret once that song came on.

The Beths were the first band on the Arbella Insurance stage that had a crowd well before they started. This was somehow my third time seeing the New Zealand indie rockers play in the last fifty-three weeks, and I'm certainly not sick of them yet. It was a shortened version of their set at The Sinclair earlier this year, but it was no less entertaining. The Beths have this great rapport in their stage banter which is just as much fun as their live set, and they are a great live band. Isaac Brock in particular became a fan of theirs, even if he couldn't remember their name.

Modest Mouse were another band I got to check off my bucket list despite decades of fandom. I expected them to be great, but it turned out to be one of the greatest shows I've seen in my nearly three decades of regularly seeing live music. Their nearly two hour set kept the entire crowd in a state of bliss. Typically festivals are mostly filled with casual fans and a sprinkling of die hards, but Modest Mouse played to a field of die hards. "Cowboy Dan" got a much bigger reaction from the crowd than the giant hits "Fire It Up" and "Float On" received. Usually two hours would be enough, but a sizable portion of the crowd kept waiting and hoping for more even after the house lights came on and recorded music started playing.

In Between Days might just be the perfect festival. It boasted a perfect line up of great acts. There were no overlapping sets, and you could see both stages from the other one. Between four thousand and five thousand fans attended both days, which is just big enough to feel like a big show but not too big to get overwhelmed. It was easy to get up close if you wanted, or you could lounge under the shade tent or hang out in the stadium's seats. You would assume that after ten hours of music, I would have been exhausted, but I was completely wired. I took a longer way home, and had trouble falling asleep because I was still on a musical high. Usually I listen to artists before I see them, but I've spent the past few days almost exclusively binging Modest Mouse, Sunny Day Real Estate, etc. to bask in my memories. In a festival world where bigger is supposedly better, In Between Days offered a perfect alternative with a well curated line up and the perfect day of the summer.

Monday, August 21, 2023

Black Market Brass - "Echo A.D."

Photo by Alanna Paloma Gonzalez

Minneapolis based psych afro-beat band Black Market Brass are sticking to their roots while branching out with their sound a bit. Their latest single, "Echo A.D.," is instantly recognizable as an afro-beat sound, but the band is mixing things up, especially on the guitars. The song is rooted in genres like jazz and funk, but the entire song is awash in indie rock guitar feedback. It's almost a wall of shoegaze that threatens to take over the entire song, but luckily horns and drums are able to continue to maintain order. It's an interesting, even brilliant, mix of sounds unlike anything we've heard before.

You can listen to "Echo A.D." below. Hox is due out September 8 on Colemine Records, and is available for pre-order here. For more on Black Market Brass, check out the band on Facebook and Instagram.

Viv & Riley - "Imaginary People"


For their latest single, folk duo Viv & Riley (aka Vivian Leva and Riley Calcagno) go a little lighter than their previous single about the climate apocalypse. "Imaginary People" is the kind of light and cheery traditional folk meets pop that we came to love about Viv & Riley. It's an uptempo and dreamy folk song that really gives the pair a chance to shine, both musically and lyrically. Leva's vocals instantly grab your attention, and the song is of the impossible to resist variety. It seems like we're in a resurgence of great folk duos lately, and Viv & Riley are one of the finest ones.

Songwriter Vivian Leva says of the new single:

"‘Imaginary People’ is about evaluating and juggling all of the different versions of myself. Was I adventurous and a little reckless? Or was I grounded and measured? Am I kind to myself or too judgemental?"

You can listen to "Imaginary People" below. Imaginary People, the album, is due out September 15 on Free Dirt Records. For more on Viv & Riley, check out the artist's website.

Live Shows: Parliament Funkadelic featuring George Clinton and Fishbone, MGM Music Hall at Fenway, Boston, MA 8/17/23


Like most people my generation, I discovered the music of George Clinton and Parliament/Funkadelic through Dr. Dre samples and the movie PCU. The 90's provided a rebirth for the funk legend, and I was lucky to see a performance of George Clinton and the P-Funk All-Stars many years ago at what was then Roxy. I have been meaning to see him again, but it just had never worked out. I thought I had missed my chance for good when he did a farewell tour a few years back, but luckily I was able to catch the farewell tour the third time it rolled through Boston. Ska-punk legends Fishbone were a perfect bonus for me.

Currently touring as Parliament Funkadelic featuring George Clinton, the band was referred to as Third Generation P-Funk. It makes sense considering the multi-generational band ranges from eighty-two year old Clinton to members in their twenties. The musicians and singers were a revolving group of fifteen to twenty (maybe more!) that seemed to meander on and off stage when needed. There were at least five back up singers, a horn section, a few guitarists, etc. Some songs were updated by the Third Generation and were straight up hip hop, while others kept their 70's funk roots intact. No matter what, the entire evening stayed a party for well over an hour.

At this point, George Clinton is more a Master of Ceremony than the main component of the band. He came out to start the show and sang most of the first song, but after that there was a chair for him to sit on by the drum set. (The man is eighty-two, after all, and Yelp is filled with thirty somethings complaining that venues don't have enough chairs.) He would sing from the chair, and sometimes get up to walk to the front of the stage, but for the most part he seemed more than content to bask in what he created and let the new generation shine. He had the air of a proud great-grandfather at a family reunion, just sitting back and enjoying the family he created. 

And the band was simply amazing. Every single player was a world class musician that nailed every part of classics like "One Nation Under a Groove," "Flash Light," "Maggot Brain," "Give Up the Funk (Tear the Roof off the Sucker)," and, oddly, a cover of House of Pain's "Jump Around." There was even an extended period for solos that included guitar, trombone, keyboard (which I think involved the theme song for the 90's X-Men cartoon), and saxophone all getting extended time to shine.

Fishbone being included on the show was perfect for me, but it seemed like a lot of the audience didn't know what to make of them at first. Opening with "Estranged Fruit," the band focused on their new EP while playing long time fan favorites. They seemed to lean more on their funk and even gospel side than their punk roots, but they stayed Fishbone throughout. "All We Have is Now" was the song that seemed to start to pull the crowd in, and the gospel infused "Everyday Sunshine" fully pulled them in. They followed that with "Alcoholic," which included a snippet of ACDC's "Back in Black," and closed with the classic one-two punch of ska classics "Skankin' to the Beat" and "Party at Ground Zero." This was the perfect double bill, and let's hope these two bands never stop touring together.

Friday, August 18, 2023

Tracy Shedd - "Let It Ride"

Photo by John Ciambriello

Wilmington, NC's Tracy Shedd has been releasing music since 1999, had her music appear on Dawson's Creek and One Tree Hill, and has played with artists ranging from Cyndi Lauper to The Magnetic Fields. Her latest single, "Let It Ride," is this interesting mixture of indie rock, folk, and surf rock. It has a distinct summertime vibe to it, so it's perfect for squeezing out the last couple of weeks of summer. It's a dreamy and somewhat hypnotic sunny single that has just a little bit of a dark edge to it. "Let It Ride" has a slight groove that is going to suck you in and make you need to move, even if just a little.

You can listen to "Let It Ride" below. The single is available now via Fort Lowell Records. For more on Tracy Shedd, check out the artist's website.