Posts Tagged ‘Grand Rapids’

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.

Weekend Warriors: Luke Winslow King, Rootstand, oh, and someone is turning 1

Published by Jeremy Martin on August 12th, 2011 - in Concert Calendar, Featured



Luke Winslow King takes stage at the Strutt in Kalamazoo on Friday night

For years, one of West Michigan’s best kept secrets has been the abundance of live music options that can be found on our side of the mitten. I, for one, like to take out of town and especially out of state guests to places like Bell’s, Founder’s or The DAAC with the sole purpose of impressing upon them just how exciting the live music culture is on Michigan’s left coast.

That being said, it may be in your best interest to wait a week or so before inviting all your best friends over for a musical pajama party. It’s slim pickins over the next few days as far as high end live music and entertainment is concerned, but that’s not to say some delicious and nutritious wheat can’t be found amongst this week’s pile of festering and inedible chaff. So if you absolutely must go out within the next few days, may I recommend.

LUKE WINSLOW KING
Friday, Aug. 12 at the Strutt; 9:30 p.m.
$7, 18+

Good luck finding a better head of hair on the ragtime, folk, jazz, traditional music circuit. Luke Winslow-King the ex-pat former Cadillac resident now living in the Big Easy takes listeners on a sonic history tour of Delta blues, folk and Dixieland jazz as played from the perspective of a northern boy enamored with southern life and culture.

ROOTSTAND
Saturday, Aug. 13 at Founder’s; 9:30 p.m.
$5, 21+

12-Track Radio will offer its birthday wishes to MXTP in Grand Rapids at the 1-year anniversary show on Saturday

Just over a month before the 2011 Rootenanny in Ellsworth (near Traverse City), everyone’s favorite swashbuckling, Celtic-grass, folkstranaughts will be stopping by Founder’s to bring their groove happy jams to the people of Grand Rapids; as if you needed another reason to quaff a freshly tapped Breakfast Stout (or three).  But remember; safety first! Please don’t dance and drive.

MXTP 1 YEAR, $1 ANNIVERSARY SHOW
Saturday, Aug. 13 at MXTP; Noon
$1, all ages

Join the hardworking folks at Grand Rapids’ MXTP as they celebrate their first productive and totally awesome year on our blue spinning marble. Midwest Skies, 12 Track Radio, Lights Out and six other West Michigan bands will be in hitting the stage beginning at noon. You may want to bring along a sewing kit, because your face will no doubt be totally rocked off.

THE WE LOVE MICHIGAN MUSIC AND DOCUMENTARY WEEKEND
The Howmet playhouse in Whitehall

Aug. 11: Shout Sister Shout
Aug. 12: Locally Buzzed: The Great American Beer Movie
Aug. 13: Asparagus! Stalking the American Life

$9.50 for a weekends-worth of entertainment, all shows begin at 7:30 p.m.

If you’re planning on being in the Whitehall area this weekend (and really, why wouldn’t you be?), the Howmet Playhouse has your evening plans covered. Thursday night begins with a rare concert by the Earthwork Collective super-group Shout Sister Shout, whose old timey vocal arrangements have been dazzling audiences (read: me) for years. After getting fired up from a quiet evening of low-key vocal folk and jazz you will no doubt be ready for two nights of educational programming! Friday night will offer the plight of local beer makers fighting against the Anheuser-Busch’s of the world and Saturday evening will be a spellbinding trip inside the world of Asparagus. You heard me.

LADYMOON
Saturday, August 13th at Bell’s; 9:30 p.m.
$8, 21+

Indianapolis based proggy psych poppers once again invade Bell’s with their heady brew of jazz/rock and indie. Not your standard Bell’s fair, but variety is the spice life, followed closely by cumin and basil.

Sam Roberts talks “Collider”, Canadian musicians and the introspective nature of northern artists before his stop in Grand Rapids

Published by Jeremy Martin on July 8th, 2011 - in Featured, Interviews, National bands



The Sam Roberts Band will appear at The Intersection in Grand Rapids on July 9.

Sam Roberts was raised on Pointe-Claire, an Island directly Southwest from the city of Montreal in Quebec, Canada. He, alongside the Sam Roberts band, has released six albums and has garnered critical acclaim in both his native Canada and here in the United States.

He won six Juno awards including Artist of the Year in 2009.

The Sam Roberts Band will be making their only Michigan tour stop tomorrow night at the Intersection in Grand Rapids. I chatted Sam up during some down time while he waited to perform at Milwaukee’s Summer Fest. We discussed his most recent album, “Collider,” the brotherhood of Canadian musicians, the introspective nature of northern artists and much more.

NOISE!: Tomorrow, you guys will be in Grand Rapids playing at the Intersection, and that will be playing to around 300 people. What do you prefer, playing these big outdoor festivals or playing in a club setting? What’s your style?

SAM ROBERTS: It’s nice to be able to switch it back and forth. If you do any one thing over and over again it can get tiring in any environment; so in the summer time, yeah, after a long hard winter like we have in these parts of the world, it’s always nice to be able to get outside and spend some time outdoors and it’s hard to keep playing rock ‘n’ roll in a small club.

NOISE: Speaking of long hard winters, I imagine Pointe Claire is a pretty tough place to grow up, you have to be a pretty hardy dude to come from that island, right?

SR: It’s a hard winter — I mean six months out of the year — but when you’re a kid, you don’t notice it. I think the problem comes when you’re a teenager and you’re still trying to wear your sneakers in the middle of January. When you’re a kid and you’re well-dressed, you have your scarf wrapped around you so that only your eyeballs are showing so you can weather the conditions.

NOISE!: I guess on that note, would you say that Northern artists or Canadian artists like yourself are maybe a little more introspective and more inward leaning in their artistic abilities just because there’s that isolation factor with the long winters?

SR: I’d say that’s an interesting point and a definite possibility — without the external stimulation that you get during the warmer months you do have the tendency to spend a lot of the time with yourself, for better or for worse. I’m sure it plays a role in not only how you make music, but how you’re thinking. I’m sure If I lived in Hawaii, I’d put a record out every ten years.

NOISE!: I don’t know if this plays into coming from where you’re from, but you’ve certainly had some struggles in your career — it has not always been a downhill road. How much of the idea that you’ve had to overcome obstacles to be where you are effects your songwriting and goes into the music that you’re making?

SR: I try not to dwell on my own career trajectory when I’m writing music and I try to sort of look beyond myself as much as possible and that has been my approach to songwriting. I’d rather talk about whatever, love and trying to find a place for yourself in this world, but outside of the context of the success or failures of my music career. It should remain separate in some ways — I think enough songs have been written about that, about being misunderstood musically, about staring out of a van window watching the prairie roll by, you know, there’s enough of that. I think there’s a lot of other things that I’d rather focus my attention towards than my own trials and tribulations.

NOISE!: You’ve been recently releasing records on Rounder, which is a pretty well-known American folk label. How do you think your sound fits on a label that’s more known for acoustic and string band music?

SR: I think it’s an interesting fit, but yeah, we don’t necessarily fit the traditional Rounder act. But at the same time, I think when you’re on a label, it’s often in your best interest to be that band that sort of sticks out from everything else that the label promotes. It teaches you to carve a little bit of a corner for yourself.
This isn’t the first time — we put out a record a few years ago on Lost Highway, which is like a country label, and we we’re putting out psychedelic rock. It didn’t last very long, but it was an interesting experiment.

NOISE!: You mentioned that your sound has shifted a little bit — you tried the psychedelic rock thing and now you’re doing more of an indie-rock ‘n’ roll sound. Do you think going the non-traditional route a little bit is good for both the label and for the artist to make sure things don’t remain static?

SR: Absolutely, and that goes for both the label and the artist. If you are constantly going back to the same form over and over again, it’s only a matter of time before you lose your own motivation and you find yourself uninspired or the label finds themselves uninspired. Then it becomes just like any old job and this should never be that. A label and a band should both thrive on the shifting nature of music. If I had to do the same record over and over and over again, I don’t think I’d be able to find the will to perform. I certainly wouldn’t be nearly as inspired to keep doing this after all these years. But I still feel there is a future with building towards and worth working towards.

NOISE!: When Canadian bands are touring through the States, do they have any camaraderie between them or is there any competition between bands when they come to the States? Would you say there is sort of a family thing or is there no connection at all?

SR: There is a real connection. There’s no real ‘us vs. them’ mentality when it comes to Canadian bands coming down like we have to band together to fend off the big bad United States — that’s not the case. I think there isn’t nearly as much competitiveness in Canada between bands as there is in the States. When we were making our record in Chicago and Broken Social Scene came though on tour, we all went out to the show and had a great night, had the opportunity to reconnect before going back home. There’s definitely a brotherhood for sure and that sustains a lot of us when you have to be out there and have to be far away from home. You want to feel as close to it as possible and it definitely helps to have that. And it’s not like we’re all musically-minded people, just people that share a physical connection with something.

NOISE!: Can you tell me a little bit about ‘Collider’. It was released in May, what has the response been so far?

SR: It’s always a two-fold response, you’ve got the people who seem to be enjoying the new direction vs. those who rebelled against it. There’s always that period of watching people, watching it resonate. It’s always fun for the band to live through it and you also have that other part where we have to go and play it on stage and find a way to translate it from the studio into a live setting and that’s always a challenge. That’s what I love about it — it’s an opportunity to rethink the record on a daily basis.

Four-night local mega show descends on the DAAC in Grand Rapids beginning Thursday

Published by Brandon St. James on July 6th, 2011 - in Concert Calendar, Featured



Brothers of Grand Rapids will perform at Rockshow on Friday night.

Sitting at Grand Coney in Grand Rapids at 3 a.m. feeding your face won’t just give you a regretful feeling in the morning.

This is also how Kelby Wieringa and Casey Kwaiser dreamt up the idea of Rockshow, a four- (count ‘em, four) night event featuring a butt load of bands from around Grand Rapids and well beyond. Nightly tickets are $8 while an event pass will set you back $25.

The event kicks off on Thursday at the DAAC in Grand Rapids and won’t stop until late Saturday night. The festival event has taken on a bit of a hardcore feel, but plenty genres will be in the mix from the emo-y sounds of Too Soon To Say to the true pop punk tunes of Midwest Skies.

“We really wanted to mix it up with a little bit of everything, but I asked a lot of my friends’ bands who happened to be hardcore, so the metal and hardcore nights just kind of grew,” said Wieringa, who plays bass for No Sleep For Panama, which will take stage on Thursday night.

Mega-bill, festival-like shows are certainly nothing new to West Michigan summers, but amassing bands of these genre is certainly a new spin on a timeless art.

“Our art scene took off so much after Art Prize and we feel that putting together a festival like this will really lead to our scene improving and get the music scene more respect,” Wieringa said. “We also wanted to do the four nights instead of like one long day because I have played some of those and all the bands before like 6 p.m. get no real crowd to perform to.”

And with these types of shows, half the battle is finding a venue that is just crazy enough to let you pile bands and fans in all night long.

But those in the West Michigan underground scene know that the DAAC is always down.

“We asked a few other venues who basically thought we were crazy for trying to put this together,” Wieringa said. “The DAAC has been super beyond the idea from the start and it being on Division, I think is really going to give it a vibe similar to when Skelletones and then Mixtape were on Division, which so many people miss. With the DAAC being a rather small venue, it should produce a lot of really fun sweaty shows.”

Here’s a copy of the event lineup:

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