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Tag: Bowery Poetry Club (Page 1 of 3)

Bowery Poetry Club

2010 Berklee CMJ SHowcase: The Prigs

With eight members on stage, the Prigs were literally the big finale to the Berklee CMJ Showcase.  There were so many players on stage at the Bowery Poetry Club that some were seldom scene behind the front line of horn players, guitarists, and singers.  The Prigs include Berklee alumni guitarists Mack Price and Pete Lalish, bassist David Lizmi, drummer Tom Roslak, trumpeter Dan Brantigan, and Adam Platt on keytar.  The band’s lyrics are full of irony, sarcasam, and pop culture references set to music, often very danceable and funky in so far as MTV was ever funky.  The song “Crush,” for example, was inspired by Janet Jackson’s music from the late ’90’s, and included the lyrics, “He’s got a crush on her/It will make him believe he’s seeing fairies in the bathroom.”

Leading up to its Berklee CMJ set, the Prigs were named one of the 12 best bands at CMJ on the Wall Street Journal’s blog Speakeasy.  How did this distinction boost the band’s profile at the conference?  Mack Price gives a surprising answer.

2010 Berklee CMJ Showcase: The Wandas

The Wandas returned the rock to the Bowery Poetry Club stage after Oceanographer’s more celestial set.  The quartet is tight from touring over many miles in its RV.  Three-part harmonies, classic rock guitar solos, reach-for-the sky lead vocals, attendant fans, songs flowing from groovy indie pop blueprints, and a general sense of revelry define this band.  The Wandas, based in Boston, include Berklee alumni Keith McEachern and Brent Battey on vocals and guitars. Boston band solidarity occurred during the Wandas set when Keith broke a string mid song, and the Honors’ Brandon Heisler quickly unpacked his guitar and passed it on stage so his turf mates could keep on rocking.

Outside of the Bowery Club, Brent and Keith tackle a CMJ hot topic – DIY touring.

2010 Berklee CMJ Showcase: Oceanographer

Oceanographer’s five members spanned the Bowery Poetry Club stage after Julia Easterlin’s singular turn.  The band’s music occupied an artistic realm charted by Easterlin, it’s set wrapped in a dreamy atmosphere and the songs sewn together with barely a pause between them by Berklee alumnus and Berkleemusic.com student Kevin Plessner’s beautiful, shimmering lead guitar lines.  Oceanographer’s music is a mix of shoegaze, indie pop, ambient, minimalist, and post-rock, representative of the current Brooklyn scene, where it is based.  The band will release a 12-song disc in 2011.

Sitting in the Bowery Poetry Club’s front room, Kevin Plessner and Jeremy Yocum, singer and guitar player, talk about their high hopes for CMJ to connect them to a wider New York scene and beyond.

2010 Berklee CMJ Showcase: Julia Easterlin

It takes the crowd at the Bowery Poetry Club some moments to figure out just what Julia Easterlin is up to on stage.  She stands alone, in front of a looping machine, humming into the microphone, then plays back the sound.  She adds another vocal tone, and then some others, harmonizing with herself.  She snaps her fingers and claps her hands into the machine, all the while playing back the progress that starts to sound like she’s surrounded by backing vocalists and a rhythm section.  But, still there is only Julia and her looping machine.  The audience is mesmerized.  Julia sings her original songs to the tracks she creates, sometimes playing guitar.  Her sound ranges from jazz to roots to pop.  Her cover of Britney Spears’ “Toxic” toward the end of the set is fun, but the real magic is watching her unwrap her songs, layer by layer, on the looping machine and discovering what she has in store with each of her own songs, like “Whiskey,” about her grandmother.

As a soundcheck was underway, Julia Easterlin spoke about the freedom of having a looping machine as a bandmate, and how she markets her music.

2010 Berklee CMJ Showcase: The Honors

Following Liptease’s electro-pop and disco sound at the Berklee CMJ Showcase, was a blast of rock and roll from highly energized the Honors.  The four-piece Boston-based band is riding high on its debut disc, xoxo, and a growing reputation for crunching live shows.  Lead guitarist Andrew Bayardi, a Berklee alumnus, riffed, soloed, and sustained feedback that pierced the band’s driving rhythm section.  He looked like Jimmy Page, though a grungy version in his flannel shirt, when he leaned over and to the side of his guitar as he played.  In front of the stage, women gathered as the band handed out free CDs at the end of the set.

Outside of the club, Andrew Bayardi discusses a big break given to the Honors earlier in its career, and how that coveted opportunity helped the band to develop.

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