Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Fes2Val shows it only takes two

Published by NOISE! Staff on August 21st, 2011 - in Featured, News, Uncategorized



George Michael said sex is best when it involves two people (one-on-one, to be exact). Well, music isn’t too shabby for bands that are two strong, either. The fellas in Grand Rapids-based math rock duo Charles The Osprey is putting some of the area’s top acts on display.

The third annual Fes2Val: It Only Takes Two is a one-day festival celebrating bands in a variety of genres that share one common element: each band has two members. The show is slated for Saturday, Aug. 27 beginning at noon at the Wealthy Theatre in Grand Rapids.

Held each year in a non-traditional music venue, Fes2Val is an all-ages event. Sponsors this year include The Meanwhile Bar, Vertigo Records and REVUE West Michigan magazine.

Tickets are $5 (advance) and $6 (day of show). Beer will be available for 21+. There will be an official after party for Fes2Val at the Pyramid Scheme, which will be hosting the Still Remains reunion show the same evening.

Here are the bands on tap
- Charles The Osprey, Grand Rapids
- Jowls, Grand Rapids
- Beast In The Field, Mount Pleasant
- Brontosaurus, Murfreesboro, Tenn.
- Bangups, Grand Rapids
- Bram N Dexous , Grand Rapids
- Noblesville, Grand Rapids
- Between Brains, Grand Rapids
- Lost Coves, Brooklyn, N.Y.
- Good News, Kalamazoo
- The Kincaids, Mount Pleasant
- Stagnant Pools, Bloomington, Ind.
- Whee, Detroit
- Back Alley Knife Show, Grand Rapids
- Boy with Mace, Grand Rapids

Scopitone VidBox offering intimate look at local gems

Published by NOISE! Staff on August 15th, 2011 - in News



The Crane Wives – Counting Sheep from Scopitone VidBox on Vimeo.


Some web sites offer video performances of awesome local artists jamming out in various settings. One of our favorites would have to be the Bridgehouse Sessions created by our friends at Mostly Midwest. These videos are both cool and impressive, mainly because we only know how to press ‘Play’ on a Flip camcorder and point it at an act playing on stage.

A new site has popped up in the heart of the Grand Rapids music scene, and it’s poised to release all sorts of visual treats. The site is called Scopitone VidBox (http://scopitonevidbox.com/) and it’s being run by four cool dudes in the Furniture City. The web site, which is also being considered a submission for the city’s annual ArtPrize, features local artists playing in some unique settings around town.

Currently, the site boasts performances from Jake Stilson, Luke Winslow King Trio and The Crane Wives, which we’ve featured here. There are plenty more on the way. Keep it locked there for an intimate look at some of the area’s brightest.

Middle Class Rut coming to Kalamazoo on Sept. 11

Published by NOISE! Staff on August 12th, 2011 - in Featured, News



Middle Class Rut

File this under a damn cool show in the heart of Kalamazoo.

One of radio’s biggest bands right now is Sacramento, California’s Middle Class Rut (this is secondhand knowledge as I don’t listen to it a ton). Receiving huge numbers of spins for catchy singles such as “New Low” and “Busy Bein Born”, Middle Class Rut backs it up with an explosive live show. Now, the two-piece act will be hitting The Strutt in Kalamazoo on Sunday, Sept. 11 with doors swinging open at 6:30 p.m. The act rolled through Michigan in May, playing the Loft in Lansing and it nearly sold out.

Tickets are $10 in advance and $12 at the door the day of the show. All ages are welcome.

This show also boasts Ume and Lite Bright with local support yet to be announced.

Michigan Pop Punk Alliance: Defending the honor of pop punk in the Mitten

Published by Alexandra Harvey on August 10th, 2011 - in Featured, News



The Michigan pop punk scene is finding a new sense of community with the help of a Grand Rapids duo.

Ryan Ykimoff, 21, bassist and co-vocalist for Midwest Skies, and Justin Stermin, 22, a self-proclaimed avid music supporter, are the co-founders of the organization known as Michigan Pop Punk Alliance. The two gained inspiration from watching the hardcore music scene grow, and decided to try and form the same sort of music community with the pop punk genre they love so much.

The idea behind the organization became more concrete roughly three months ago, and the official MPPA Facebook page was launched one month ago.

“We wanted to take our time and do it right,” Ykimoff said. “But we’re still a fledgling organization with some kinks to work out.”

MPPA’s Facebook page is one of the key tools Ykimoff and Stermin are using to give the bands the sense of support and community.

“Bands get to share resources with other bands,” Stermin said. “Without the MPPA it’s an opportunity they might not have had.”

The MPPA thus far consists of eight bands: Cities and Years, Eyes on the Sky, Maybe Next Time, Midwest Skies, Steinhart, Three Cents Short, Too Soon to Say, and Way to Fall.

“But we’re always accepting applications,” Ykimoff said.

But the MPPA has some stringent requirements for that members have to meet. In addition to having a pop punk sound, the MPPA looks for bands who have a more established fan base and sound – bands who have already put forth a lot of time and effort.

“We don’t want to be jerks, but we want the bands to feel like they’ve earned their membership,” Ykimoff said. “We want to help bands who have helped themselves first.”

Down the road, they hope the organization can ultimately become a brand and label with merchandise and shows all under the MPPA name. Ykimoff and Stermin have also been tossing around the idea of an MPPA mini-tour. It would be a somewhat informal tour that would travel all across Michigan, with the hope of getting the organization’s name out there and giving the bands some exposure. In addition, they hope that the cross-state tour will help bands make connections on the opposite side of the state.

“One of our main goals is to bridge the gap between east and west side bands,” Ykimoff said. “It can be surprisingly difficult without any pull on the opposite side of the state.”

Both Ykimoff and Stermin are optimistic about what the future holds for the MPPA’s.

“There’s just been so much pure, raw support,” Stermin said. “We’re really excited for the future of the bands and the organization.”

Lakeshore’s Mux Records dropping singles every week for the entire summer

Published by NOISE! Staff on August 2nd, 2011 - in News



Muskegon record label Mux Records has launched a new local music initiative. Each Tuesday this Summer, they’re releasing a single online from their house bands. They call their initiative The Summer of Mux.

So far, they’ve already released a bevy of digital singles, including songs by local favorites Skee-Town Stylee, Homeless Poet and Project Grizzly.

“We’ve got additional singles queued up for release from King Crabapple, Grand Haven crooner Jared Sjoblom, Short Hair Domestics and others,” said label co-founder Lou Jeannot. “I expect we’ll be releasing them well after summer. It’s been so fun, we’re thinking about making it a regular thing.”

The Summer of Mux singles are being recorded at Muskegon recording studio The Green Room by producer and engineer Will Jeannot. For their latest, and to keep up with their unrelenting local music deluge, check them out at http://facebook.com/muxrec — or visit their new website at http://muxrec.com.

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