Friday, November 15, 2013

Clear your calendars for ROCKABILLAQUE this Saturday, 11.16!


Fast Cars and Faster Music - Rockabilly meets barbecue at this weekend's inaugural Rockabillaque festival


Charleston is no stranger to themed musical events and other niche gatherings. The world-renowned Spoleto keeps the classical crowd pretty content; the JailBreak series represents the hipster indie scene; beach music and shag festivals can be found in abundance; and the Southern Ground Music and Food Festival has the Americana craze covered. 

But what about a festivus for the rest of us?

Clear your calendars for this weekend's Rockabillaque festival in Park Circle, a rockabilly music and classic car show event that combines some of the best elements of Atomic post-war American nostalgia - a 1950s fashion show, rat rods and restored cars, whiskey tastings, barbecue, and of course, classic rock n roll. 

This all-day event is scheduled to last long into the night, so get your pomade and your livers ready! The classic car show kicks off at 1p and is sponsored by Nostalgia Garage and Creek Rats Kustoms. Trophies will be awarded later in the afternoon for Best of Show, Participants Choice, Longest Distance Traveled, Preservation Class, Best Rad Rod and Best Paint Job. The Exchange Factor is sponsoring a 1950s fashion show at 2pm, featuring custom designs from retro clothing line, Sabrina Michelle. Ten classic beauties will be modeling Sabrina's styles, followed by a pin-up contest at 4pm hosted by Jonny Cosmetics, which will also be providing pin-up makeovers throughout the afternoon. PBR will be on hand, giving away koozies, sweat bands, trucker hats and more, with sale proceeds benefiting The Music Initiative / This is Noteworthy. Whiskey tastings will be provided by Ivy Mountain Distillery, and The Barbecue Joint will be serving up steaming plates of their beloved Park Circle barbecue.

But let us not forget the music. Rockabillaque organizer Simon Cantlon, producer and director behind the nostalgia documentary "The Motels of Route 66", knows a thing or two about good music and hand-picked all of the bands who will be performing. Throughout the day along the street, music will be provided by DJ Greasy Gregg, Whiskey Diablo, Skunk Ruckus (Asheville) and Sean K. Preston and the Loaded Pistols (Baltimore). At 6p, the shows move inside with Pierce Edens (Asheville) playing on the patio at Madra Rua. At 8:30p, The Mad Tea: Krekel & Ami (Asheville) start things up at The Sparrow, followed by surf rockers Jason & the Juggernauts. At 9:30p, get over to The Mill to see one of the Southeast's favorite rockabilly bands, The Defilers, play their first hometown show in close to a year. The Bo-Stevens (Winston-Salem) rounds out that bill, while Carnivalesque and Sean K. Preston wrap the night at The Sparrow.

Admission to Rockabillaque is free, as are all of the daytime performances and events. There is a $10 door charge to see the four acts at The Sparrow, while The Mill and Madra Rua are free. So patch up your leather jacket, tighten those victory curls, and get ready for a solid day packed with food and booze, cool cats and cars, and lots and lots of good ol' rock n roll. 


Saturday, November 16, 2013
East Montague Avenue - Park Circle
1p - 2a

DJ Greasy Gregg (aka, Worship the Sky)





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Thursday, September 19, 2013

The Last Summer Weekend of 2013

After a record season of rainfall, and not a named hurricane to speak of, summer in Charleston is finally coming to an end ~ but that doesn't mean the fun has to! Check out our list of happenings throughout this last weekend of the summer, and enjoy this beautiful city of ours!


THURSDAY ~ Sept. 19
Don Merckle & The Blacksmiths streaming live on The Woodshed
8:45p ~ FREE
Want to get your weekend started early, but still have to get up for work in the morning? Tune into The Woodshed Archives tonight at 8:45p to catch a live stream of Don Merckle (vox + guitar) and The Blacksmiths, including Jason Brachman (guitar), Kevin Pettit (bass), Chris Lawther (banjo) and Stan Gardner (drums). Kick back on the couch and enjoy the new, energetic grassroots line-up as they bring the music to you!



FRIDAY ~ Sept. 20
TEDx Community Presentation
9a - 5p ~ FREE
Charleston County Public Library ~ 68 Calhoun St.
TEDx is a non-profit movement that brings together technology, entertainment and design. Independently organized events take place across the globe, and this Friday at the Charleston County Public Library, you can join Dan McCurry of Charleston record label Hearts & Plugs as he presents his talk, entitled "Roll With the Punches, Go With the Flow...Or Whatever." Dan's portion of the presentation begins at 11:30a

Metronome Charleston One-Year Anniversary Bash
6:30p - ?! ~ $7
Tin Roof ~ 1117 Magnolia Rd.
It's already been a year since Metronome Charleston launched as the city's biggest independent music blog, with its interviews, music news, reviews and photo galleries. Come help the Metronome team celebrate their successes with a 6-band bash this Friday at Tin Roof! Festivities kick off w rock n roll trivia, and bands include Jordan Igoe (who will also be celebrating her birthday!), Lindsay Holler + the Western Polaroids, Fairy God Muthas, Columbia-based The Unawares, ELIM BOLT and the Boring Portals

"Blast from the Past" 40th Birthday Celebration of Folly Beach
8p ~ FREE
Folly Beach Pier ~ 1 Center St.
Forty years ago, Folly Beach became incorporated as its own city, separate from Charleston! Help our not-so-sleepy little beach town celebrate by coming out to the pier this Friday for a special showing of the documentary History of Folly Beach, followed by a Moonlight Mixer - Shaggin' on the Pier! Festivities will continue throughout the weekend, so read through the Saturday and Sunday event listings to get details about the family and pet-friendly activities, events and musical line-up!



SATURDAY ~ Sept. 21
Record Store Day / Charleston Record Expo
10a - 5p ~ FREE
Monster Music & Movies ~ 946 Orleans Rd.
Support your local bands and record stores with Monster Music & Movie's Charleston Record Expo #6, this Saturday! Vinyl dealers will be selling records priced from $1 to $100, and will also be available to appraise your own record collection. SpaceCraft Studios will be on hand teaching a crafts workshop at 11a, with proceeds benefiting Girls Rock Charleston; at 2p, Papa Robbie's Reggae All Stars will perform, and Refueler's Mobile Cafe will be there to feed the masses. Parking is free and aplenty, so come out and get some new-to-you tunes for your record collection!

"Blast from the Past" 40th Birthday Celebration of Folly Beach
9a ~ FREE
Tides Hotel ~ 1 Center St.
The day begins with a pet-friendly walk/run/bike/skateboard/rollerskate 5k, with all proceeds benefiting the Folly Beach renewal process. Pirate wear is encouraged! The day will continue with live music, food and plenty of entertainment including carnival rides and other games.

Awendaw Green Rhythm and Brewfest
3 - 9p ~ $40 adv/$45 dos
Sewee Outpost ~ 4853 Highway 17
Join the Awendaw crew for a celebration of Charleston's craft breweries! Westbrook, Holy City, Palmetto and Frothy Beard Coast Breweries will be on tap to serve up the brews while you enjoy a barn jam-style showcase of live music including Merri Creek Pickers, The Bent Strings, Simple Syrup, Everybody-Doug-Jones, The Train Wrecks and Flatt City. The first 250 ticket holders score a free t-shirt, 8 oz. brew mug and eight beer tickets!

Dangermuffin and Old You
9p - 1a ~ $10adv/$12 dos
The Charleston Pour House ~ 1977 Maybank Highway
Fresh off their Canadian tour date w The Avett Brothers, Dangermuffin returns home to Charleston! Come out and support their Album of the Year (as voted by the CPMAs), Olly Oxen Free, and get a FREE digital copy of the album when you buy an advanced ticket for the show! Sharing the stage will be Old You, the energetic and bluesy acid rock 4-piece named the Up-and-Coming Act of the Year by the CPMAs.



SUNDAY ~ Sept. 22
Carolina Green Fair
12 - 6p ~ FREE w $1 parking admission
James Island County Park ~ 871 Riverland Dr.
The 6th annual Carolina Green Fair has moved to the James Island County Park, and has a variety of new exhibits - along w some old favorites - including live music from the Chickasaw Mud Puppies, a New Belgium Beer School, a Green Building + Energy Conservation Tent presented by SCE&G, cooking demonstrations, a green market and tons of kid activities. 

"Blast from the Past" 40th Birthday Celebration of Folly Beach
Classic Car Show
12 - 4p ~ FREE
West Arctic Street

Folly's birthday festivities continue on Sunday w a classic and antique car show! All cars will be pre-1973, and can be seen on display along West Arctic Street. If you have a classic ride that you would like to register for the show, you can still try giving Kelly Carroll at call at 478.3026.

TROM 4-year Anniversary
9 - 1p ~ FREE
Tin Roof ~ 1117 Magnolia Rd.
Open mic comedy. Free pizza. Crafty concoctions courtesy of Lesley and the boys. What else could you want on a Sunday night?? Come out for the 4th anniversary party for the Tin Roof Open Mic comedy night! Bring your friends, bring your belly laugh, bring your beer goggles - it's gonna get good n weird!





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Friday, August 23, 2013

Charleston gets hardcore

America. Alt-country. Indie rock.

On any given night around town, you can find shows fitting an array  of styles. From jam bands at the Pour House and acoustic sing-alongs at Folly, to a one-man-band using homemade banjos at The Mill, the scope of sounds in and around Charleston casts a very wide net. 

But there is one faction of rock n roll in this town that rarely sees the light so often shone onto the indie acts, and that is the thriving metal/punk/hardcore scene. Bands like Dirty Circus, Hooded Eagle and The 33s have drones of loyal fans who crush into places like Big Gun Burger Shop and the hulking Skatepark of North Charleston to sweat and thrash to the music. Metronome Charleston recently did a killer write-up about the locally-run metal radio show BHNFUX, and the metal scene has been attracting other hardcore bands from as far off as Darkest Hour in Washington, DC and Adestria in San Diego, to Downfall of Gaia, a doom metal 4-piece from Germany. 

A punk and metal music showcase, featuring at least eight local bands, is in the works for early October, but you can get a taste of the action tonight (8.23) for FREE when First World Problem, The Corpses, Paper Tiger and Blindfucks take over The Sparrow, in Park Circle. It's going to be a helluva show, and again - it's FREE!

The Sparrow - 1078 E. Montague Ave.
p: 744.7743






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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Look Alive comes full circle with debut EP 'Mistakes & Milestones'

Atlanta punk rockers Look Alive, a 5-piece whose understanding of music is anchored by their appreciation for the guts that it takes to survive, is hitting the road this month in support of their debut EP, Mistakes & Milestones (release date: 07.02.13), and they're kicking things off right here in Charleston with a show at The Mill on Friday, July 12th.

Having more than ten years of experience behind them, filled with countless nights of going hungry and sleeping on strangers' floors or in cars, the members of Look Alive came together for their current line-up last summer, and were quickly signed to Atlanta-based record collective, Autumn + Colour Records. With Mistakes & Milestones, the band is paying homage to just that - all of the mistakes and the milestones made along the road, as well as the friends, family and fans that have all brought them to where they are today.

From the opening shreds of "Anchored", Mistakes & Milestones rips into you with all of the energy one would expect from a hard working, pop-punk band (think Polar Bear Club, or The Wonder Years), but with the melodic aggression of bands like the Deftones, or Muse's earlier stuff. George McMullan (guitar/vox), Cody Wellons (guitar) and Jace Kay (bass) fuse together in perfectly layered lockstep, while the drumming of Patrick Cash propels the songs forward like an intricately timed piece of machinery. Seamlessly moving to and from double-time beats and spitting out machine gun-like snare rolls, Cash's strength behind the drum kit compels the listener to move, whether you roll your head, stomp your feet or shake your fists.

The guitars fit snugly over the drums, a refreshing blend of classically riffy lines thick with thoughtful chord progressions. On tracks like "Sink or Swim" and "The Way I See It", McMullan and Wellons complement one another, producing a full sound with enough distortion to land the heavy punches, but without burying the details of their fancy finger work. Jace Key executes a solid foundation with his bass guitar, throwing a weight behind the band that is often lost in the overarching genre of pop-punk. But one of Look Alive's strongest attributes is perhaps the voice of singer Jacob Causey, who escapes the snotty trappings of other punk frontmen, like Patrick Stump of Fall Out Boy, with a gritty aggression more on par with the likes of CKY's Devon Miller. 

"Just let me take this opportunity / to say the things I need to say to you," are the first words on the record, revealing the open book that is Mistakes & Milestones. Causey's straight-forward, take-no-prisoners approach to lyrics gives the band a smart, identifiable edge above the punk fray. His voice is clear and strong, belting out lines that sway from biting ("So figure it out / and understand it's all or nothin' / I see who you are / you're going nowhere fast") to bittersweet ("This town means everything to me / so I won't go down easily / As you can see it's always the same two things / that's got me runnin' on empty"). 

But in "Over/Under", the last of the seven tracks, Look Alive comes full circle. "So I packed it all up / I left everything behind / there was only so much I could take / And I remember / that I was getting in the way / spending most of my time wasting space," Causey growls over spatial guitars and pounding drums.

"But these mistakes make milestones / and I'm not giving up, I'm getting out."

You can buy and stream Mistakes & Milestones via the links below, and make sure to come out to The Mill in Park Circle this Friday, July 12th, to catch Look Alive's first Charleston show! Sharing the bill will be Loners Society and el Camino. Music starts around 10p, and shows at The Mill are always FREE!

Buy Mistakes & Milestones from iTunes
Stream Mistakes & Milestones on Spotify
Look Alive on the Web: www.LookAliveATL.com
Look Alive on Facebook: www.Facebook.com/LookAliveATL
Autumn + Colour Records on the Web: AutumnAndColour.com




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Wednesday, July 3, 2013

4th of July Soundtrack ~ You're welcome!

4th of July To Do List
.
Beer - check!
Fireworks - check!
Recovery day off from work on the 5th - check!
Soundtrack for inevitable shenanigans - crickets...

Don't have your 4th of July soundtrack ready to go? Well we've got you covered! Check out our Independence Day Playlist including all things Americana, from road trips and train rides to Francis Scott Key, himself! (Well, sorta...) 

Have a safe holiday and enjoy the tunes!

1} "Pinstripes", by Loners Society
2} "We're an American Band", by Grand Funk Railroad
3} "Highway 61, Revisited", by Bob Dylan
4} "Open Box Car Door", by The Defilers
5} "Believe It Or Not", theme from Greatest American Hero 
6} "Cowboy Song", by Happy Story Hour
7} "America", by Simon & Garfunkel
8} "Birmingham", by Shovels & Rope
9} "The Star-Spangled Banner", performed by Jimi Hendrix 
10} "America, (Fuck Yeah)", from Team America World Police




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Friday, June 21, 2013

Summer Solstice Playlist ~ 2013

The summer solstice occurred in the early hours of the morning, ushering in the beginning of the summer and the longest, most sun-filled day of the year. 

To help celebrate the season, and all of the humidity, rain storms, lightning shows and beach haze that it brings, here's a list of our Top 10 summer-inspired songs ~ enjoy!

1} "In the Summertime", Mungo Jerry
2} "Sunny Afternoon", The Kinks
3} "Walk, Don't Run", The Ventures
4} "Summer Breeze", Seals and Crofts
5} "Summertime Rolls", Jane's Addiction
6} "Cooper River Nights", Brave Baby
7} "Under the Boardwalk", The Drifters
8} "The Boys of Summer", Don Henley
9} "Summer in the City", The Lovin' Spoonful
10} "Summertime", Janis Joplin



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Wednesday, June 12, 2013

The Specs come home to the Tin Roof

One of Charleston's most enduring bands, The Specs, made their triumphant return to the Tin Roof last week in front of an enthusiastically packed house.

Blending the effects-laden, progressive sound of their earlier days with the more straight-forward indie songs of recent years, The Specs captivated the crowd from the first notes of their opening tune, "Spirits". Singer Eric Galloway sat behind the keyboard, wearing an unassuming, plain white t-shirt and a meek grin on his face, only to unleash one of the boldest and most controlled voices that I've heard in this town. 

"Lights will fade into the darkness / where your soul will escape out of your eyelids," he sang, veins crowding his neck and sweat soaking through his shirt. He seemed almost possessed by the music, and rightly so.

The veteran musicians that make up The Specs work with a range of dynamics that is often lost on less experienced bands, gliding from gentle to crashing all within one beat of a measure. Shawn Krauss navigates the drum kit like a true professional, adding texture to each song with his steady tempo and tactful fills, yet knowing when to drop back and let the carefully crafted tunes speak for themselves. Guitarist Steve Tirozzi has a cache of effects that he used throughout the set, allowing him to move fluidly from the finger pickings of "Those Eyes" to the more cathartic sounds needed for songs such as "Infinity", while bass player Brett Nash - the newest member of the band, but by no means a newcomer to Charleston's music community - was the constant of the night, guiding each song with his even pace and creamy tone. 

The rich vocal harmonies provided by Tirozzi and Nash cast a nostalgic veil over The Specs' lush sound, which only felt appropriate for a band that has sustained itself for more than a decade in the often fickle and sometimes turbulent Charleston musical climate. It was exciting to experience a band whose members are visibly moved by the music that they create together, and who still clearly enjoy playing with one another. And while Galloway, Krauss, Tirozzi and Nash have become increasingly busy with multiple other projects, work, and that little thing called life, The Specs are working on a new record and have earned their place as a fixture among Charleston's musical fabric, and should serve as the lodestar for which up and coming bands can learn.

Once upon a time, John Lennon said that "Life is what happens while you're busy making other plans." Sometimes, it appears, heartfelt music and an enduring legacy happen, as well. 

The Specs @ Reverbnation: www.reverbnation.com/TheSpecs




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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Death to Dubstep - Loners Society hit the road with their Summer Tour

It's been a busy year for Charleston's boutique record label and music collective, King City Records. 

With their artists receiving heavy rotation on local radio, recording video shoots, having nightly performances around town, and making appearances at events such as the recent 7th Annual First Flush Festival and the upcoming Summer SOULstice Celebration - not to mention the first ever "Storytellers"-style King City Records Sessions last month - label manager and resident musician Matt Megrue has done one hell of a job spreading the King City word. 

And it has now been officially announced that KCR band Loners Society will embark on an 11-date tour across the Southeast, the Death to Dubstep 2013 Summer Tour, and will be kicking things off right here in Charleston with a July show at The Mill, in Park Circle. 

"This tour is all about being on the road and playing those sweaty, intimate, 4-piece rock n roll shows," Megrue says. "We wanted the opportunity to try out some new material before we hit the studio and we're so excited to be visiting some places and towns we haven't played before along with some old, familiar haunts."

In addition to trying out new material, the Death to Dubstep tour will also feature the debut of the band's new drummer, Josh Beasley. The previous drummer and longtime friend of Megrue, Brian McMickle, parted ways with the band earlier this year in a very un-rock n roll manner - meaning it was a peaceful, supportive and heartfelt decision: McMickle wants to spend more time with his infant son and family.

"To say that we (Loners Society) are simply losing a drummer would be an enormous disservice to Brian and everything he has meant to me (personally and creatively) over the last twelve-plus years," Megrue says.

You can catch Loners Society on their opening night at The Mill on July 12th (FREE show, doors around 9:30p), and check out the rest of the dates below.

7.25.13 @ Rockin Hard Saloon (Murrells Inlet, SC)
7.26.13 @ Deep South (Raleigh, NC)
7.27.13 @ Satellite (Wilmington, NC)
8.04.13 @ British Bulldog Pub (Columbia, SC)*
8.08.13 @ The Saloon (Charlotte, NC)
8.09.13 @ Radio Room (Greenville, SC)
8.10.13 @ Conundrum Music Hall (Columbia, SC)
8.21.13 @ Awendaw Green (Awendaw, SC)
9.27.13 @ The World Famous (Athens, GA)
9.28.13 @ Vinyl (Atlanta, GA)

Loners Society website: www.LonersSociety.com
Loners Society on Facebook: www.facebook.com/LonersSociety‎
Loners Society on Twitter: @LonersSociety‎






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Friday, May 17, 2013

Melodic rockers LIVE BAIT reunite at the Windjammer

PRESS RELEASE - Live Bait "Reunion Show", feat. guests from the Jason Aldean Band, Spunjwurthi, Kemp Ridley
Friday, May 17, 9 p.m.
$7 - The Windjammer, Isle of Palms

Live Bait, an original Charleston roots-rock band who gained popularity in the late 1990s will reunite once again onstage at the Windjammer on Friday, May 17.

Vocalist/guitarist David Dunning and percussionist/vocalist Bruce Patrick initially formed Live Bait as a duo in 1996, but they soon morphed into full band status after winning an acoustic competition at the old Café 99 venue that year. With the addition of pedal steel player Jay Jackson, bassist John Krucke, and drummer Scott Price, the band independently produced and released a self-titled acoustic rock album that earned attention in the Lowcountry music scene for its sing-along songs and smooth vocal harmonies.

After Jackson moved to Nashville in 1998, electric guitarist Chris Barrineau joined the band, rounding the band to a full rock sound. With Barrineau, Live Bait recorded their second full-length, titled Second Hand. It earned rave reviews locally and regionally and sold more than 8,000 units without any label support.

After the release of Second Hand, bassist Ben Polk replaced Krucke and Live Bait hit the road for the next five years. Local radio stations 96 Wave, 98 Rock, and 95SX helped support the buzz around the band by adding their songs into regular rotation, including the singles "Second Hand" and "But I Do" from their third album, Single Slice.

After extensive regional touring and showcasing for major record companies, the name Live Bait no longer seemed to fit the heavier style of rock they'd developed over the years. In April 2000, the band officially changed their name to 210 Deluxe while performing the 96 Wave birthday bash at Joe Riley Park. Upon Price’s occasional absence to tour with punk band Cletus, multi-talented Keith Bradshaw (previously of the Groovy Cools) stepped in to play drums and transitioned to second electric guitar when Price’s tour was over.

210 Deluxe disbanded in 2003. Many of the former bandmates will reunite at this month's Live Bait reunion show at the encouragement of Jackson, who currently plays pedal steel full-time with Nashville-based country superstar Jason Aldean.

It’s no coincidence the Windjammer Bait reunion will follow the Aldean concert at the North Charleston Coliseum this same night. Jackson will work double-duty that night by playing full sets at both venues. He will bring along some of his Aldean bandmates to grace the Windjammer stage as well. When asked if Jason Aldean himself will make a special appearance, the band’s tight-lipped response was, “We don’t know.” They're certain, however, that this will be a special occasion with a few surprises. 

Admission to the Windjammer show is $7 at the door. Charleston rock band Spunjwurthi and Columbia-based act Kemp Ridley (acoustic) open the show. Doors open at 9 p.m.

Visit the-windjammer.com for more.

Live Bait on Facebook:

Friday, May 10, 2013

Fundraiser for Jordan Igoe ~ feat. Brave Baby and Black Top Desert

The Royal American, the refurbished and repurposed hot spot tucked away on Morrison Drive, is hosting a fundraiser this Saturday (5.11) to help the lovely and talented Jordan Igoe record her debut album. 

On nearly any night of the week, Jordan can be found playing a show around town, whether it's with her duo Happy Story Hour or her Wednesday mash-up at Juanita Greenberg's, but this weekend she will be sharing the Royal American's austere stage with rising Charleston darlings, Brave Baby. Signed to the local label Hearts & Plugs, Brave Baby released their debut record earlier this year and quickly established a dedicated (and steadily growing) fan base, touring the Southeast throughout the month of January and hitting the local circuit hard with their thoughtful lyrics and dreamscape guitar work.

Rounding out the bill will be Black Top Desert, a relative newcomer to the Charleston community, but already a welcome addition. Having spent his childhood among the empyrean landscape of the Southwest, singer Johnny Delaware reflects this astral upbringing in his music. "My faded eyes don't shine bright in the sun," he sings in "Planetary Systems", while the song "Sarahlina" - a gently swaying tune with a mellow brass line running throughout - includes lyrics such as, "There's gotta be a secret way / it tries to pull me away and under / But tugging me another way / I gotta try just a little bit longer." The words tell the story, but it is Delaware's voice, perhaps above all else, that gives the band its passion. Combining the haunting romanticism of Alex Ebert with the strength of a young Jackson Browne, Black Top Desert is sure to bring a new, fervid energy to the scene.

Show Details:
The Royal American - 970 Morrison Drive
Doors 9p - $5

Jordan Igoe on ReverbNation: www.revernation.com/JordanIgoe
Brave Baby on Bandcamp: www.BraveBabymusic.bandcamp.com
Black Top Desert on SoundCloud: www.soundcloud.com/BlackTopDesert


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Friday, April 26, 2013

The Dubious Battles - A Showcase of Songwriting and Friendship

cross-pol*li*na*tion (n.): The transfer of pollen from one flower to another, producing stronger and more vigorous plants. These genetic diversities often result in the evolution of new species.

The same can be said of music.

Blending the sweet sounds from some of Charleston's rock royalty, The Dubious Battles is evolution at its finest: a homegrown supergroup born from a collaboration among friends. Originally formed during the 2011 charity tour "How the Other Half Gives", The Dubious Battles features Luke Cunningham, Ryan Bonner and Tyler Mechem, each solidly successful with their individual projects but coming together again out of a mutual appreciation for one another's talents.

"We enjoyed being around each other," Cunningham says, "singing each other's songs and playing music together so much that we knew we'd have to get together again and do something collectively."

So when Cunningham was invited to perform at this weekend's Jail Break Festival, he saw it as a golden opportunity for The Dubious Battles.

"I thought that, given Jail Break's focus on art and creativity, it would be the perfect event to showcase this side project that we've been itching to unveil."

The performance will include original songs composed by all three members (they currently have close to twenty in various stages of progress), unreleased solo material and favorite tunes from each of the guy's other projects: the Luke Cunningham Band, Ryan Bonner and the Dearly Beloved, and Crowfield. And while there are no concrete plans to record a full album, The Dubious Battles have been working on ideas for an EP and have released their first single, "Bad Deal (Goodbye, Tuesday)", a nostalgic folk tune with an irresistible cadence and sweeter-than-honey string section, riding the vocal harmonies like a warm summer breeze.

"Luke, Ryan and I have known each other for a long time...but we were always creating our own music, separately," Mechem says. "Now, we're all in it together. No matter who brings the song to the table, we all need to be proud of what we perform. There's a lot of trust that goes into that."

The Dubious Battles take the stage at the Jail Break Festival this Saturday (4.27) at 6pm. For tickets and other festival information, visit www.jailbreakcharleston.com.

To download "Bad Deal (Goodbye, Tuesday)", visit the iTunes Store

Band Websites
The Dubious Battles
Luke Cunningham
Ryan Bonner
Tyler Mechem




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Monday, April 22, 2013

Wrapping up April

There are some pretty sweet shows going down around town this last week of April - enjoy the spring while you can, because the summer sweats are right around the corner! 


MONDAY- April 22nd
- "After School Special" w Rachel Kate + Antoine Dukes
Charleston Pour House, on the deck
6p - FREE
- South Carolina Broadcasters
Yo Burrito
6:30p - FREE
- ELIM BOLT, Scott Dense and Water Liars (Oxford, MS)
The Royal American

9p - $5
- Sarah Cole + the Hawkes
The Drop-In
9:30p - FREE

TUESDAY - April 23rd
- "Eclectic Evenings" feat. Happy Story Hour, Port City Prophets + Hibachi Heroes
The Royal American
7p - FREE
- Happy Story Hour
Home Team BBQ (West Ashley)
8:30p - FREE
- Matadero backs J. Roddy Walston + the Business (Baltimore)
The Rec Room
9p - FREE
- The Nobody Brothers (a Ryan Bonner project), Tuesday residency
Loggerhead's Beach Grill
10p - FREE

WEDNESDAY - April 24th
- Barn Jam feat. Heartfelt Hinges, 72nd Central, Ryan Boss, Georgia Slim, Josh Haskins and Dean Johanesen
Awendaw Green
6p - donations
- Charleston Blues Review
Mad River Bar & Grille
6p - $50 adv/$65 dos
- Guilt Ridden Troubadour
Home Team BBQ (Sullivan's Island)
8:30p - FREE

THURSDAY - April 25th
- Graham Whorley
Juanita Greenberg's (Mt. Pleasant)
6:3op - FREE
- Folly Beach Bluegrass Society
Folly Crab Shack
7p - FREE
- Guilt Ridden Troubadour
The Southern Bar & Grill
9p - FREE

FRIDAY - April 26th
- Aaron Firetag + Friends
Charleston Pour House, on the deck
6p - FREE
- The Dead 27s and TJ Jazer (Greenville)
The Windjammer
9p - $7
- Jordan Igoe
Cutty's Elliotborough Establishment
9p - FREE
- Versus Angels, Fusebox Poet (Charlotte)
Tin Roof
9p - $5
- Ryan Bonner Band
Home Team BBQ (West Ashley)
9p - FREE

SATURDAY - April 27th
- Fifth Annual Strap-On Face Funk, feat. The Dead 27s, OldYou, Yellowknife, Shonuff, Gaslight Street + more
Charleston Pour House
3-10:30p - $5 adv/$10 dos
- "Rhythm is My Business" local female talent showcase, feat. Jordan Igoe, Lily Slay, Stefanie Bannister + Dorothea Hudson
Main Library Auditorium
3-4p - FREE
- JAIL BREAK music, arts + funhouse street fest, feat. Brave Baby (5-6p); The Dubious Battle (Ryan Bonner, Luke Cunningham + Tyler Mechem, 6:30-7:30p); The Royal Tinfoil (8-9:30p); Steven Fiore (10-11p)
Old City Jail
4p - $15 adv/$20 dos

SUNDAY - April 28th
- "Girls Rock!" Charleston Volunteer Interest Party
Andolini's, downtown
3p - FREE

MONDAY - April 29th
- "After School Special" w Rachel Kate + Antoine Dukes
Charleston Pour House, on the deck
6p - FREE
- South Carolina Broadcasters
Yo Burrito
6:30p - FREE
- "Willie Nelson's Birthday Tribute", feat. Lyndsay Holler, Lesley Carroll, Fairy God Muthas, Jimmy Snyder + more
Tin ROof
7-11p - donations

TUESDAY - April 30th
- "Eclectic Evenings", feat. Skwirl Grinda and Godwin Falcon (Savannah)
The Royal American
7p - FREE
- Co. plays w Modern Man and Besnard Lakes (Montreal)
Charleston Pour House
8:30p - $10
- Whiskey Diablo
Home Team BBQ (West Ashley)
9p - FREE
- Scott Dence
The Rec Room
9p - FREE
- The Nobody Brothers (a Ryan Bonner project), Tuesday residency
Loggerhead's Beach Grill
10p - FREE


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Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Charleston Blues Revue aims to breathe new life into the Delta


Flowertown Festival. The Cooper River Bridge Run. Lowcountry Cajun Festival. These are all great Charleston events, but what do they have in common?

They all happen just once a year.

Enter the Charleston Blues Revue, a new musical theater show which its founders, Daniel Island residents Charles Wyke-Smith and Chris Watson, are hopeful will fulfill Charleston’s lack of a continually running entertainment experience.

With a background in web development and independent design projects, Smith has also worked in live event production and in 2008 organized a benefit show at the Music Farm, which raised $6,000 for the family of a local soldier who was killed in Iraq. But it wasn’t until a business conference in Italy that Smith began to think about the dinner entertainment experience. 

He and his co-workers were taken to a small theater in a town along the Amalfi coast. They were served a nice meal and enjoyed Italian wine while a group of performers put on a show about the history of Italian music.

“They did pantomime, they did opera, they even did Dean Martin, you know, ‘When the moon hits your eye’ and so on,” Smith recalls, “just a whole bunch of stuff and it was this great look at Italian music.”

Upon returning to Charleston, Smith began noticing how tourists wandered the streets downtown in search of something, some kind of activity, to do.

“They’ve been to a restaurant. They’ve spent the day looking at historic buildings, they’ve been out to Fort Sumter…Now they’re walking up and down East Bay Street, determining which bar might be okay to have a drink in,” he says. “There’s nothing that’s continuously running here that’s reliable entertainment.”

Smith began working with Chris Watson, whose background includes technology, government contracting and a passion for music, when Watson needed an iPhone app created for one of his business ventures. 

“I enjoy building businesses, and I appreciate the heck out of music,” Watson says. One conversation led to another and soon, the two men were swapping ideas for the development of a Charleston-based, dinner and musical entertainment experience. 

Smith had previously established the Lowcountry Blues Club, which hosts a revolving door of weekly shows around town, so the southern influence on modern music only seemed like a natural fit as the basis for what eventually became the Charleston Blues Revue.

And the timing seems right, as well. With internationally acclaimed events taking place in Charleston such as the Family Circle Cup tennis series and the Spoleto Festival, and the recent spotlight of Condé Nast Traveler naming Charleston the Number One City in the World in 2012, our quaint town has been receiving a lot of attention lately. And while it may not be the largest city along the east coast, there is enough viable energy and plenty of potential here to sustain a regular show like the Charleston Blues Revue.

“New York is an extreme example,” Smith says as he explains his motivation. “But that’s how people plan their trips for these cities. ‘I’m going to see these shows on these nights.’ They have a specific thing you can go visit. Charleston is great during the day. But at night you either go to a restaurant, or you go to a bar, and that’s about it.”

With the Charleston Blues Revue, Smith and Watson want to entice people to extend their visits to the Holy City.

“If ninety percent of tourists stay just one extra day,” Smith points out, “those things have massive multiplier effects.”

“I’ve seen a lot of other shows,” he continues, “and they tend to be very sanitized and saccharine sweet, and I wanted to do something a little more authentic that really caught the spirit of our times and the past [in Charleston], and America in general. The blues, it didn’t happen by accident, let’s put it that way. You can’t really look at the blues without looking at the social and political circumstances.”

Currently, the Charleston Blues Revue has its first two premiere shows scheduled for April 17 and 24 at Mad River Bar & Grille, on the market downtown. Described as a blend of “authentic sound, visual expression and historical sweep,” the show is already a sizeable operation featuring ten dancers and a dozen singers and musicians, all of whom were selected from right here in Charleston.

“We’re trying to do a show that locals will also want to go to,” Watson says. “This is not just a blues show.”

“You don’t have to scratch too far below the surface of any modern music to find the blues,” Smith elaborates. “So the first half of the show is a kind of narrative of how the blues evolved, and how America came to the 1960s which was a cataclysmic point in America. JFK, the decision to go to the moon, the pill, all these things, and of course the collapse of segregation, all these things dropped at once.”

Over the course of two hours, audience members will be taken on a journey from the depths of Delta blues with pioneers such as W.C. Handy, progressing out of the rural south and into ragtime and Chicago jazz, the birth of 1950s rock and roll, the tumult and explosion of the 1960s, and eventually into the genres of more recent popular music. Smith and Watson aimed to select songs that would be representative of their time period without using the usual chart topping suspects, and then took to writing their own arrangements.

“I want to invoke the spirit of the times, not copy it,” Smith says proudly.

In addition to dining on classic Lowcountry fare while enjoying great tunes, audience members can also look forward to taking part in the show, which is going to encourage crowd participation and have a strong interactive element.

“We’re packaged entertainment,” Watson explains.

Executing the Charleston Blues Revue is an impressive line-up of musicians and vocalists. Band leader and saxophone player Louie Dixson has shared the stage with the Derrick Trucks Band and members of the esteemed Dizzy Gillespie Band, and was offered multiple music scholarships before joining the Navy to support his family. Ben Hawes (trombone), Chris Williams (keys/sax/vox) and Wayne Mitchum (bass/vox) are all regular members of the local party band Plane Jane, who can be found playing a show almost any night of the week. Many of the featured vocalists have been singing since they were as young as three-years-old. The show’s narrator, Ermitt “Mr. Blues” Williams, was raised in Harlem but spent many summers visiting North Carolina, soaking in the southern blues culture.

The shows on April 17 and 24 are going to serve as a sketch of what the full performances will be like. Smith and Watson anticipate rolling out the Charleston Blues Revue’s regular run of three nights a week in the very near future, once the success of the premiere comes to fruition and they are able to gauge any final adjustments that may be needed. Mad River will seat about 115 people, but Smith and Watson hope to move the show to a venue that can seat at least 200 people, allowing them to create a bigger atmosphere for the show and increase its economic viability. It’s sure to appeal to all blues fans, but with the vast scope of styles that the show endeavors to pay homage to, the Charleston Blues Revue is likely to draw even the most casual of music listeners and Charleston buffs.

“I’m not trying to change the world, per se. I’m trying to put on a good show,” Smith says. “If people have something to take away from it, that’s great! Come for the music, leave with the story.”

Tickets for the shows include dinner and can still be purchased through the Charleston Blues Revue website at www.CharlestonBlues.com.


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