Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Dog Days of Summer kicks off Friday night with a bang

Published by NOISE! Staff on July 30th, 2011 - in News



Jake Simmons and the Little Ghosts perform outside at Dog Days of Summer

The maiden voyage of the Dog Days of Summer Local Music Festival went off with a bang last night.

With 13 bands in the mix, hailing from everywhere from Chicago to Ann Arbor to right here in Kalamazoo, Old Dog Tavern featured two stages — one indoor, the other outdoor.

In addition to explosive performances from bands like Jake Simmons and the Little Ghosts, The Mushmen and STRDSTR, the night also featured an extended set by Fly Paper, the Micaela Kingslight-fronted bluesy rock band that released its new album and will now embark on a tour all the way out to California.

The first installment set a record for single-event attendance at Old Dog, but with the outdoor stage rocking, there is still plenty of room. And we’re doing it all over again tonight. So get on down to Old Dog Tavern and take in bands like Fishlips, Elm Street Riot, Three Cent Shorts, Wires and Lights and MANY more.

With album on the way in November, Four Finger Five to release single “B.S. And Greed” on Saturday

Published by NOISE! Staff on July 29th, 2011 - in Featured, News



Four Finger Five


Grand Rapids rock/pop/soul trio Four Finger Five is back on the scene after a writing hiatus. The trio is prepping its newest set of tracks for a November album release. The band hopes the album, dubbed “Soul in a Suitcase”, will usher in an ever-broader fan base, a lofty feat for a band with credits like Summer Celebration and Rothbury already on its list.

Fully independent, the group has launched a Kickstarter project (www.Kickstarter.com) to support radio promotions for the record, and plans to press it on vinyl as well as CD. But first,
fans can keep an eye out for a series of singles, a sparkly new website and a whole lot of swag.

With this latest set of category-defying tracks, “Soul in a Suitcase” launches Four Finger Five right past their Billboard Magazine title “Top 5 Up and Coming Festival Bands” into a realm both wider and more distinct. The first single, “B.S. and Greed”, drops July 30 and will be available as a free download at www.fourfingerfive.com. The single is a cleanly recorded pop track that’s deceivingly dark, both a testament to the band’s years of studio experience, and evidence of their commitment to pushing themselves musically and as showmen.

And they’re more polished than ever. These days the guys stroll out to the stage in suit and tie, commanding their sets with a bigger-than-three sound, expertly finessing a rapt audience of audiophiles and hipsters alike.

We are officially inside the dog days of summer (subtitle: why is it so @#$%ing hot outside?)

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



West Michigan NOISE! appropriately presents sizzling local music talent to accompany the stifling late-July heat. Beat the dog days of summer with Dog Days of Summer Local Music Festival, a two-day concert event at the grounds of the Old Dog Tavern — 402 E. Kalamazoo Ave. — in Kalamazoo on July 29 and 30.

Both nights kick off at 6 p.m. and feature an indoor and outdoor stage. The ages 18+ event costs $6 per night, or $10 for a two-day pass. Tickets can be purchased at the host venue or through bands performing.

Dog Days will present talent from Kalamazoo, Grand Rapids, Ann Arbor, South Haven and Chicago, running the musical spectrum from rock to hip-hop to folk.

Bands confirmed for the event are as follows.

Friday, July 29, 2011
Killing Faith (Kalamazoo/alternative rock), Sevin (Battle Creek/alternative rock), Star Destroyer (Kalamazoo/rock), The Mushmen (Kalamazoo/ska), The Clydesdale Scale (Kalamazoo/punk), Synergetic (Kalamazoo/hip-hop), Thirty Steps To Forward (South Haven/folk), Chasing The Sky (Grand Rapids/pop rock), Fly Paper (Kalamazoo/blues rock), Jake Simmons and The Little Ghosts (Kalamazoo/indie rock), Jess Godwin (Chicago/singer-songwriter), Brad Radtke (South Haven/singer-songwriter), Alejandra O’Leary Rock ‘n’ Roll Band (Ann Arbor/rock ‘n’ roll), Number The Stars (Grand Rapids, pop rock)

Saturday, July 30, 2011
Three Cents Short (Grand Rapids/ska punk), Elm Street Riot (Kalamazoo/rock), Fishlips (Kalamazoo/pop rock), No Stars In Brooklyn (Grand Rapids/pop rock), Midwest Skies (Grand Rapids/pop rock), Relapse (Grand Rapids/rock), This Haunted City (Kalamazoo/alternative rock), Day Lewis (Kalamazoo/rock), Pleasant Drive (Kalamazoo/psycadelic rock), Plastic Fantastic (Kalamazoo/rock), Guru^garzaH (Kalamazoo/dub step), 12-Track Radio (Grand Rapids/pop punk), Wires and Lights (Paw Paw/acoustic rock).

Smoke Fairies slated for an in-store performance and meet-and-greet at Green Light Music in Kalamazoo

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


British bluesy folk duo Smoke Fairies will be making just one appearance in Michigan this year and it couldn’t be a more intimate affair.

The band, comprised of Jessica Davies and Katherine Blamire, will stop in at Green Light Music and Video in Kalamazoo on Aug. 16 for a free in-store performance in addition to a meet-and-greet.

The 12:30 p.m. stop is en route to their show in Sandusky, Ohio later that night at The Underground.

While you’re in there, you might want to scoop up a bunch of CDs and vinyl. Just sayin.

ABOUT SMOKE FAIRIES
At school in rural England during the mid-late‘90s, best mates Katherine Blamire and Jessica Davies hoped they’d one day escape their home town and dive headlong into the landscape and myth of America, the promised land of their dreams. Little did they know that by 2010, they’d have lived in New Orleans and Vancouver, recorded with 21st century icon Jack White and toured across continents. And now they’re releasing a debut album that fulfils the promise of their earlier singles.

“Through Low Light And Trees” is an exquisitely shivery blend of alternative
folk-rock and a more humid, bluesy brand of Americana, a sound both eerily ancient and thrillingly modern, with beautifully interlocking harmonies and guitar parts behind the spectral melodies. “Instead of learning how to sing or play individually in a conventional way, we’ve learnt by bouncing off each other, and fitting in with each other,” says Katherine. “It’s a connection we wouldn’t have found anywhere else.”

That connection began in the school choir, and deepened by picking up their parents’ guitars and obsessing over Jessica’s mum’s vinyl albums collection, dominated by American ‘70s classics: “The first time I heard Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, when those harmonies kicked in, there was nothing else like it,” Katherine grins. “Those old records sounded so otherworldly.” A year spent in New Orleans in 2002 also helped shape their sound which evolved even further when, back in England, they discovered more British folk at the Sidmouth Folk Festival. “Sometimes the way you find out who you are is by first leaving it behind,” says Jessica.

With their band name in place – Smoke Fairies alludes to the summer mist that collects in the hedgerows of Sussex’s narrow country lanes – the duo started gigging. But restless and adventurous, the pair moved again, this time to Vancouver, drawn by the mountains and sea. Flitting between jobs and short on money, their year in Canada was, “an intense experience,” says Katherine. “But a lot of our songs came from that time. You have to let the mayhem out somehow.”

Jack White was early to respond to their music, when he heard one of their self-released singles and offered to produce a track for his Third Man label at his Nashville studio. Recorded in just 36 hours, with White on drums (and “mad guitar solo” on ‘River Song’) and his Raconteurs / Dead Weather pal Jack Lawrence on bass, ‘Gastown’/ ‘River Song’ was released in December 2009.

After another spell of writing last winter the Fairies headed for Sawmills studio in rural Cornwall in the Spring to start work on their debut album with producer Head (best known for his work with PJ Harvey) and their current live band.

Through its 11 tracks, “Through Low Light And Trees” smoulders with an honest, often painful emotional intimacy. “A lot of our songs are drawn from the experience of travelling around and leaving, or feeling distant and out of place, and the heartache that comes from looking back and longing,” says Katherine. ‘Summer Fades’, ‘Morning Blues’, ‘Feeling In Turning Blue’, ‘Storm Song’ and ‘After The Rain’ all tap a well of loneliness, when relationships stumble and crumble. ‘Hotel Room’ and ‘Blue Skies Fall’ tap a more optimistic view of love but elsewhere, ‘Devil In My Mind’ is inspired by, “dark, menacing,” London (“in the end, we’re country people at heart”) while ‘Erie Lackawanna’ (the end destinations of a train route that once ran past Jessica’s grandfather’s house in New Jersey) concerns old age, and change. So does ‘Dragon’, albeit like a dark English fairytale, where the narrator wishes to be eaten by a murderous dragon, “to take her out of the pain after everyone else has been killed around her.”

And yet in person, Katherine laughs, “We’re genuinely quite cheerful! On stage, we can indulge in some ridiculous banter, and then we play something quite moody and mournful”

Smoke Fairies’ own fairytale continues to unfold. Having toured with Richard Hawley across Britain late last year and then being heralded as one of the bands to see at this years SXSW festival, they then headed off to the states to support Laura Marling for a month and recently released Ghosts: A Compilation of A-Sides, B-Sides and an EP from the Recent Past exclusively for the US market. Most recently Jessica and Katherine added supernatural, angelic backing vocals to Richard Hawley’s current EP False Lights From The Land. When the calibre of White and Hawley are entranced, you know this isn’t fairy-tale, but the absolute truth.

Epic music video in the works for Holloway

Published by NOISE! Staff on July 19th, 2011 - in Featured, News



Holloway

Grand Rapids-based progressive metal act Holloway will release its second music video, entitled “The Gaze Eternal”, on Aug. 2 via its website and YouTube channel.

Clocking in at just under 20 minutes, it is the visual companion to Holloway’s 2010 three song EP of the same name. The film is structured to be projected behind the band in a live performance and is also a stand-alone piece in its own right.

This is not a music video in the traditional sense, as no band members appear on screen. Instead, the film is a loose narrative following a priest who uses necromancy to bring a plastic doll to life, questioning his faith in the process. Cut throughout with imagery, the film takes viewers on a sci-fi acid trip across the void, set against the striking background of Holloway’s music.

The film was produced almost entirely in house by band members and frequent collaborators, on a shoe string budget. Ross Morgan, the bands frontman and director of the video, adds: “Fans of the band know that the visual aspect is very much as large a part as the musical aspect. This video was created in my spare time as a way to keep myself busy and to give something different and unusual to our fans. It’s based off of the artwork that came with the EP and is a solid dose of high-strangeness,
which is what you can expect from us”.

The video will also be released as a very limited edition DVD of 50 copies, hand numbered, and signed by the band, available only from the group’s website and at live performances. The film has also been
submitted to several local, national, and international film festivals.

Holloway is currently recording their second full-length album and is in rehearsals for a mid-August opening slot for heavy metal godfathers Queensryche.

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