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15 June, 2014

Jamestown Revival: The Difference Between Making and Not, Don't Stop

 
Jamestown Revival is Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance and they have recently released their first full length album, Utah. Which is fitting as the album was recorded over a two week period in a cabin within the Wasatch Mountains in Utah. I recently had...
 
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08 April, 2014

Buffalo Killers

Buffalo Killers
A review by Moose
 
 
           Buffalo Killers are a homegrown rock 'n' roll band from right here in Ohio. Andrew Gabbard (vocals and guitar), his brother Zachary Gabbard (bass guitar), and drummer Joseph Sebaali make up this band that is heavy on the hooks but not lacking the rock. These three fine musicians came from a band called Thee Shams, and sometimes as most often bands do they broke up. But these three guys branched off regrouped and formed Buffalo Killers in October of 2006. Lucky for us they kept it going, because with their brand of classic rock it combines and old sound with a new taste.
 
 
        Andrew and Zach grew up with music all around them. A guitar playing father taught them how to play at an early age to the classic rock that their father was listening too. It was inevitable that they would form a band it was just a matter of when. As their father laid they ground work the boys got better and soon found themselves releasing their debut self-titled album as Buffalo Killers. Their father taught them and they soon found themselves getting help from an unlikely person, that being Chris Robinson the front man for The Black Crowes. Who heard their debut album and invited Buffalo Killers to open up for him on a string of tour dates in 2007. Then if that wasn't enough, their second album Let it Ride, was produced by Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys. This kind of attention made the inevitable dream now reality, and they have been laying the rock down for a long while.
 
      Their latest album Heavy Reverie has brought this former power trio a new member. Sven Kahns now adds another guitar and a lap steel to make this band even more unique than it already was. According to Andrew with Sven joining them it now "frees them up"  they don't have to do so much. With the new album in tow, which according to Houstonpress.com in a recent interview with one of the Gabbards, he said it took all of "five days" to record the ten tracks, and in an era where some bands take months to release a follow up it is quite a pleasure to know that these fellas just went in there and rocked it, Buffalo Killers style. This being their fifth full-length album they were able to work with Jim Wirt who has worked with Incubus and Fiona Apple amongst many others. He helped them keep within their style, but also grow within their songs. These Buffalo Killers are establishing themselves with this new album as hard working musicians can go, and their hard work is paying off.
 
      The album has been completed and let the touring begin as these Buffalo Killers grace Cincinnati this Saturday April 12th at Motr Pub. The show will sure to be harkening back to those classic rock days, but with a Buffalo Killers touch. They bring the loud and if you are looking for somebody new to see, or just wanting to see these fine folks again head over to Motr and find out why Chris Robinson said "they're the best (expletive) rock 'n' roll bands in the world."
 
 



13 March, 2014

Shoot Out The Lights: Lets Get Lost


Shoot Out The Lights: Lets Get Lost
The new album
Review by: Moose



Shoot Out The Lights, or SOTL, is a rock and roll band formed here in Cincinnati, Ohio circa 2009. Josh Muddiman on raspy throaty vocals and guitar, Elaina “Laney” McCormick vocals and keys, Matt “Mook” McCormick lead guitar, Joshua Howard bass and vocals, and Alan Topolski on drums round out this band that at its simplest form is just rock and roll.  This is their second album which was self produced at All Nighter Studio by Tommy Capel.
    SOTL brings a soulfulness to their style of rock and roll whereas the listener you truly can just get lost. The melodies are crisp and clean via the keys and guitar tones. The vocals and lyrics well formed around those melodies, and through this album they bring their styles all too the forefront, and by rock and roll standards this album can hold it’s own. These fine folks in SOTL are bringing a refreshing style of rock and roll to Cincinnati. They bring you into their space. There place where they formulate and construct straight to the teeth rock songs.
    They all share in the  songwriting process. Something that Joshua Howard and Josh Muddiman both told me under a night sky about two months ago. Making this a shared experience in making music with everyone involved. Lightening the load and making this more like a family. While recording this album they wanted to switch it up a bit. Moving “Mook” over to lead guitar and Josh Howard over to bass. Was a move by their own account “that may have brought demise to other bands” opened the door for more “thunderous and melodic bass grooves and fiery guitar riffs.”  By doing this you can hear a band that is coming into their own. The growth of playing together is evident on this album.
    Now as for the album itself. I was graced with the pleasure of getting an advanced listen, and these folks stay true to their roots with the rock and roll, but also, have songs that stay true to the jazz, blues, and country roots of Cincinnati their hometown. I did find myself getting lost in these songs. Whether it was lyrically, the melodies, or just the combination of the two they melded their roots and styles into about an hour long of nine tracks that flow just like our river, or with the weather about to warm up an album great for taking on your road trip.
    Some may say rock is dead, but that is just a matter of perspective, and with SOTL this is definitely not the case. There brand of rock brings it home. They amp it up at the live show, and it quite simply is straight up rock and roll. They bring it back where it came from and are showing us where it can go. Rock and roll is many things, and can be many things, but SOTL has found their way of doing it. Has found within themselves how they can make it work, and it most certainly does.
    Their new album “Lets Get Lost” is releasing on March 14th with a release party at Northside Tavern here in Cincinnati, Ohio.  You can also find them at:
sotlmusic.com
facebook.com/sotlmusic1
twitter.com/shoot_lights
reverbnation.com/shootoutthelights
   

08 February, 2014

Ben Knight & David Faul
"The Apple Hill Sessions"
 
 
 
      Over the course of November and December of 2013 Ben Knight, from Ben Knight and the Welldiggers, and David Faul (formerly of Terminal Union and now with Josh Eagle and the Harvest City along with doing his own thing), got together and to work on some Travis style picking arrangements and songs. As the sessions were going well they decided to record a couple of these songs at David Faul's Apple Hill studio.
 
 
      Six songs made it onto this lovely EP. That however you listen to music, whether it be in your car just driving around or at home while lounging, resurrects a style that has been hidden in the underground. With Travis picking not being very much in the forefront, or in popular realms of music nowadays, these two gentlemen decided to pay homage to a style very much a part of them. And, for a moment introduce their fans and supporters to something a little different.
 
 
    With "Cannonbal Rag" as the opener to this EP, a song by Kennedy Jones, they lay the groundwork for the listener. The picking can take your mind back to a time that seems lost in this day and age. Hopping the rail with no penny to your name and seeing where this train will take you. "Homebody Blues" a song written by Ben Knight pretty much sums up how most people can feel sometimes. Just wanting to stay in and lounge around. "Deep River Blues" (Delmore Brothers), and "I'll See You In My Dreams" (Isham Jones) two songs that envoke a style that both Ben and Dave enjoy and wanted to share. "Apple Seed" closes out this fifteen minutes of chemisty between tow of the best songwriter's this city has to offer.  A Ben Knight and David Faul original. Won't say much else to this than if you see them pick up a copy for yourself. If you can't see them message David Faul at davidfaul@gmail.com for any orders.
 
 
    They came together out of a jam session and respect and love for each other, and at David Faul's Apple Hill Studio's messed around and layed some tracks down. Through that session of getting together realized they needed to get this EP out quick as Christmas was coming up. Luck for us they "clicked" and put this little gem together. The similarities of influence and style are right here within these fifteen minutes. Hopefully, in the future they would be kind enough to do something a little longer, but until then check out this EP. Go take a listen to Ben Knight and the Welldiggers at any of the numerous shows they have around town. As well as head on over to The Crow's Nest for David Faul's artist in residence there for the month of February. These two songwriter's and friends wanted to share the connection that music can bring, and here it is waiting to be heard.
 
 
 
 

 


08 November, 2013

chicago farmer: a mid west troubador

Chicago Farmer: A Mid West troubadour
A review/bio by: Moose Gronholm
 
 
                Chicago Farmer comes from a small town in Illinois and brings his folk songs via the interstate and state roads that he drives on to each and every show. These roads he travels have become a main source of inspiration and have taken him back to a young age, where at 17 Cody Diekhoff, better known as Chicago Farmer, got a guitar that his dad bought for him his first “real guitar” and gave his poetry a voice.   I’m reminded of something a folk singer from Chicago once said “there’s great poetry in this stuff,” that guy was Fred Holstein, and, this guy Chicago Farmer definitely has a way with words.
                Whether it is storytelling, spoken word, or just a good old sing-a-long Chicago Farmer brings his poetry from being an “outlet of emotion and creativity” too putting it in song. There is no shortage of tunes to choose from either. Over the course of about seven or eight years Cody has put out numerous recordings some six tracks long some fifteen tracks long. All encompassing  where he has come from, the small town or the big city, and “with great big stars in my eyes” from a song called Gunshots on Tuesday he embodies the travelling folk singer.  This song that I just mentioned also gives a good look into where he has come from and where he went and to a certain extent where he is now. Although a few years older now than when the song was written and recorded, but the feeling can still be the same.
                From a recent conversation I had with Cody I asked him what the songwriting process was like for him and he said “It definitely varies, sometimes they come raging through my head like a flood. Sometimes there’s definitely a drought. When that happens (the drought), I usually put the notebook away and just go for a long walk or drive and live life for a few days. When I get back, I usually have a lot of material. Sometimes the words come first, sometimes the melody and music. The other day I wrote a song in five minutes,  and now I’m trying to finish a song I started a few years ago.” Through this writing process you can hear the wheels on pavement or boots on the ground. Cody brings you along for the ride that he has been on since he was seventeen, and again there is no shortage of tunes choose from.
                Being a one man show makes for a great experience at a live show, and as the attendee you brought into the world of this singer songwriter from a small town in Southern Illinois. As one man show he feels it’s important for him to be unique and stand out from the other “guys with guitars.” He certainly does with his own material, a harmonica, a stomping foot, storytelling, spoken word, and sing-a-longs. You won’t see any “smoke or mirrors, props or effects” at a Chicago Farmer show, although from that recent conversation I had with him he did say “I do occasionally enjoy a good fog machine at my one man folks shows.” 
                For Cody (Chicago Farmer) the support of family has made the road easier to travel. From graduating high school and his mom and grandpa turning an old room in their basement into a music room , too his dad buying that first “real guitar,” but most importantly the support of his wife as well. “She travels to almost every show, makes the wheels go round, and encourages my dreams,” a quote from our recent conversation. If not for this support system Cody would probably still be in southern Illinois “breaking things with nothing better to do,” he told me.
                This mid west troubadour will be playing all over you can check him out at chicagofarmer.com, facebook, or pick up his new album “Backenforth, Il” on itunes. Cincinnati we are graced with him coming to our small town and playing the southgate house revival this Friday the 8th along with Whiskey Bent Valley Boys and Buffalo Wabs and the Price Hill Hustle. With Chicago Farmer’s “one man show” he will bring you on the road with him if just for an hour or so. Through the foot stomping and sing-a-longs  songs from a time once forgotten but still alive and going strong.

18 October, 2013

those darlins

By: Moose Gronholm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KHR1PcfVGSc

Blur the Line: Those Darlins gut Rock N Roll and Make it New Again.

Those Darlins are hitting the road with the release of their third album! Those Darlins formed in Nashville in a college town just outside of their hometown, Murfreesboro, TN. Their hometown had a pretty good music scene and through that scene they were able to meet, find similar interests and started playing together. Jessi had wanted to become a Veterinarian or a homeopathic healer, each great professions to get into, but lucky for us she found the guitar and these fine folks. In a way Those Darlins are healers as music can be therapeutic. Blur the Line is certainly proof of that.

Blur the Line melds the different styles that encapsulate them. Those Darlins are; Jessi on guitar and vocals, Nikki on guitar and vocals, Linwood on drums, and a newly added bassist Adrian Barrera who they met on tour a couple years ago. They bring their punk rock, soul, and straight up rock and roll influence to the forefront on this masterful album. They do not “blur the lines” they take the inside reaction from outside influences, which Jessi was kind of enough to tell me in a recent interview, and slap it on this thirteen song album.

This first track “Oh God” kicks it all off with a slow build into a rock and roll ending. Asking “Oh God what I have done?” As the album progresses they keep the punk and rock influence on this record driving, with songs such as “Optimist” and “Drive.” Towards the end of the album “Western Sky” has just an easy driving melody with the chant of “I don’t want to hear another civilized war, let’s make our own noise.” That could sum it all up, but as the album comes to a close with the last track “Ain’t Afraid”, the vocals get gritty and the wall of sound bleeds through the straight up rock n’ roll that has driven the album.

For these folks this album isn’t a coming of age, rather, this album brings the listener to where they are right now in their musical lives. Sure, growing up with Appalachian songs is at their core, but they have found their sound and they are running with it. The record was wrote over the course of two years and according to Jessi, “The goal was to write a new album, because we are musicians, and that is our job. We wanted to represent ourselves and where we were at as people. It’s kind of like therapy ya know? We’re all crazy people we need music to make something positive out of it.” This album definitely conveys that emotion and feeling. With the help of Roger Moutenot of Haptown Studios in Nashville, the producer of the album, who helped them pick out 14 tracks to focus on the album keeping that feeling alive and present. No looking back just moving and living in the moment.

On the wings of this third album, produced by Roger Moutenot and created by Those Darlins, hopefully the sky is merely the beginning. They will be taking this record and their live show across the US, and hopefully around the world. Those Darlins did something with this album Blur the Line... they hit the refresh button on rock n roll, they gutted it and made it new again. It was a refreshing listen to my ears. Cincinnati we have the honor of welcoming them back on Sunday October 20th  at the Northside Tavern. I’d get your tickets soon!

Enter to win tics to the show HERE!

w/ Gambles
Sunday October 20th
9p Doors / 10p Show