For the latest and up-to-date information on the hottest up-coming artists in the MD, WV, PA region. Interviews, photos, demos, and more! What have you done for local music today?
Monday, September 30, 2013
BADASS Raves DJ Discovery Contest
Tri-State Jam launched a few months ago with an article about local trance-house DJ from Hagerstown, MD: Virtek. Since that article posted, Virtek has played several kick-ass events, including several at the Baltimore venues "Grafitti Warehouse" and "The Chop Shop", and raised the energy two nights in a row at Mountain Madness 5, playing till dawn or the equipment shut down. Continuing to book gigs almost every weekend, Virtek has also recently entered into the BADASS-Raves DJ Discovery Contest, found here: https://wavo.me/apps/charts/badass-raves-contest
BADASS Raves throws some highly anticipated and major events in the Baltimore/Tri-State Area, and is currently on the look-out for some more major talent to include in their up-coming line-ups. Selected winners will be chosen based on quality of mix, song selection, and who's got a big following via votes.
If you are a fan of Virtek's article and music (article found here: http://tristatejam.blogspot.com/2013/08/dj-virtek-progressive-house-electro.html), and would like to see him out-and-about at upcoming shows, then please visit the following links to vote for either (or both) of his submissions:
https://wavo.me/apps/charts/badass-raves-contest/8666598091010000
https://wavo.me/apps/charts/badass-raves-contest/8666575684610000
The original sound-cloud mixes can be listened to here: https://soundcloud.com/virtek
All mixes can be found via mixcloud: http://www.mixcloud.com/Virtek/
This is also a post to encourage all other local DJs to enter and have their sound be heard. While I highly encourage the notice of Virtek, please support all local musicians in their expeditions. Help spread the word, and never stop listening.
What have you done for local music today?
- Tri State Jam
Updates
Sometimes, Life takes off with us before we can even blink.
I apologize to all followers for the delay and decrease in posts lately. Hopefully, that'll be up to change! However, I am deciding to make some adjustments to Tri-State Jam.
Firstly, before anything else, the 2 Sides 2 Die interview will be posted this week! That is still happening, and I'm excited for everyone to get an in-depth look into this band. Having know lead man Zack Burkett for years, having watched 2 Sides 2 Die change many members and evolve through sound, I can't wait to introduce you into what is coming up next for them!
As for changes: I'm deciding to cut the Bi-Weekly Features (after 2 Sides 2 Die) and post articles/interviews as the interest comes. This could be either introduce an influx, or a decrease -- it's hard to tell. I'm also going to make an attempt to post more information regarding the local music scene in general -- show reminders, venue reviews, music contest, what-have-you! So if you have any information you'd like to share, if there is anything local music related that you would like to promote, please, reach out, and we will talk.
I would love and will accept any help from anyone in the local music scene who wants to donate their time whenever available, as well. Whether conducting interviews, writing articles, posting about show reviews, etc., anyone just looking for a writing or music out-let, here is an opportunity; just because my schedule over-flows does not mean I want to see this project die, and any help I can get would be much appreciated.
More information and posts will be upcoming. Stay connected through facebook.com/corynrosecapture and contact through corynrose115@gmail.com
I apologize to all followers for the delay and decrease in posts lately. Hopefully, that'll be up to change! However, I am deciding to make some adjustments to Tri-State Jam.
Firstly, before anything else, the 2 Sides 2 Die interview will be posted this week! That is still happening, and I'm excited for everyone to get an in-depth look into this band. Having know lead man Zack Burkett for years, having watched 2 Sides 2 Die change many members and evolve through sound, I can't wait to introduce you into what is coming up next for them!
As for changes: I'm deciding to cut the Bi-Weekly Features (after 2 Sides 2 Die) and post articles/interviews as the interest comes. This could be either introduce an influx, or a decrease -- it's hard to tell. I'm also going to make an attempt to post more information regarding the local music scene in general -- show reminders, venue reviews, music contest, what-have-you! So if you have any information you'd like to share, if there is anything local music related that you would like to promote, please, reach out, and we will talk.
I would love and will accept any help from anyone in the local music scene who wants to donate their time whenever available, as well. Whether conducting interviews, writing articles, posting about show reviews, etc., anyone just looking for a writing or music out-let, here is an opportunity; just because my schedule over-flows does not mean I want to see this project die, and any help I can get would be much appreciated.
More information and posts will be upcoming. Stay connected through facebook.com/corynrosecapture and contact through corynrose115@gmail.com
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Pooch and the Moochers - Grunge Rock from Waynesboro, PA
Pooch and the Moochers: Grunge Rock from Waynesboro, PA
Five to ten years from now, where do
you want to be?
“By the year
2020, we'll be in Japan,” Shane Huckle says. “We'll be bigger
than Godzilla.”
This prompts a
round of laughter no one can with-hold. I look around at the group of
musicians who make up the garage punk band from Waynesboro, PA, Pooch
and the Moochers: Ty Clopper on guitar and vocals; Kyle “Pooch”
Spencer, bass and vocals; Shane Huckle, vocals and guitar; and Mark
Thomas on drums.
This is when it
dawns on my how happy they are. To be together, in their studio,
surrounded by their instruments, just enjoying their life. The
realization of what drives their music hits me moments before the
band members confirm it, but it should have been obvious right from
the start. The complete love and fun of music is what drives Pooch
and the Moochers, and nothing is going to stop them from enjoying
making their music.
“Eighty percent
of the time, we're just having a good time,” Ty says.
Mark, the newest
member of the group confirms it. “I've never laughed so hard than
when I've been with these guys.”
It's true. A good
time is what equals success. Pooch and the Moochers is musical proof.
- - - -
Formed five years
ago, when Ty, Shane, and Kyle were just teenagers jamming in high
school, Pooch and the Moochers has come a long way since their days
of playing in living rooms and searching for open mic nights.
“Once we got a
practice space, things really came together for us.”
Five months ago,
Mark joined the ranks, originally on bongos, when they heard him play
at an open mic night at The Dawg House, a local bar in Waynesboro,
PA. From there, Pooch and the Moochers found their heavier sound,
moving away from all acoustic tunes, and took off without taking a
look back. Since adding their fourth and final member, Pooch and the
Moochers agreed they've really adapted and embraced their harder
sound.
“We had just five
songs. Now, we're up to twenty-four originals.”
Tri-State Jam: How has the band
evolved since its beginning, besides moving away from an all acoustic
sound?
Mark: We've gotten
a lot tighter, and have really found our sound.
Kyle: We feed off
of one another's energy.
TSJ: What is your favorite thing
about performing?
Shane: To be in the
zone; ultimately, the self fulfillment.
Mark: The look on
people's faces, and know you are doing something that no one else is
doing.
Kyle: The
entertainment factor. To be up there, and have fun, and you just hope
they like the sound.
Ty: Being in the
moment, taking out the energy and being in the present.
TSJ: What does Pooch an the Moochers
hope to inspire with music?
Mark: Just be proud
of what you do.
TSJ: How did each of you,
individually, begin in music?
Pooch and the
Moochers: Over-all, we're mostly self taught in our own ways. Pooch
taught himself, Mark began in rum circles, Shane's uncle purchased
him his first guitar at age twelve, and Ty credits Brad Munn as his
mentor.
TSJ: As a band, what is something
not commonly known about you?
Pooch and the
Moochers: Our nicknames; Kyle isn't the only one with a pseudonym.
Kyle: Pooch
Ty: Gummy Bear
Shane: Gremlin.
Mark: Hammer head.
TSJ: How did the name “Pooch and
the Moochers” come to be?
Pooch and the
Moochers: We realized that no one ever cares about the bass player;
they're shoved in the corner and no one really notices him. So we (Ty
and Shane) were chatting one day, and decided to put Kyle, also our
honorary bachelor, in the lime light, and he just had to go along
with what we created. So we brainstormed several combinations of
“Pooch and...” and came up with “Pooch and the Moochers.”
Kyle: Mainly
because I was also the only one with a full time job at the time, so
they weren't mooching just off of my bachelorhood.
TSJ: What items, not necessarily
music related, could you not live without?
Kyle: It's just
music for me.
Mark: Cooking.
Shane: Oxygen.
Ty: My motorcycle.
TSJ: What does the future hold for
Pooch and the Moochers?
Shane: Lots of
debt.
Mark: More
out-of-area shows. Looking into DC and Baltimore.
Pooch and the
Moochers: The USO tour, playing for the troops. Supporting them like
they support us, every day.
Mark: Outside of
that, some hole in the wall, in some back alley bar in DC or
Baltimore. A lot of 9:30 clubs.
TSJ: Where do you want to be five to
ten years from now?
Pooch and the
Moochers: Still jamming, at the very least. On the road, touring.
Shane: In Japan.
We'll be bigger than Godzilla.
TSJ: How do you view the scene in
your area?
Mark: It's a cover
band wasteland.
Shane: Why would
you want to play some one else's songs?
Pooch and the
Moochers: “If you want a cover, go to bed.” It's a moocher
nation! We'd love to see more originality in the area. We want to be
as original as we can.
Ty: Local musicians
support one another, even cover bands and original bands. It ups the
craft, to have your fellow musicians out there supporting you at
shows and open mic nights.
TSJ: What, so far, has been your
favorite venue?
Pooch and the
Moochers: The Dawg House. We would pack that place. And without it,
there wouldn't be a band.
TSJ: Final words?
Pooch and the
Moochers: Don't be a puppet to small town America. Support local
music. We've noticed people would rather buy a shirt over a CD, like
they would rather buy your image than your music.
Kyle: Be yourself,
and have fun.
Ty: Music spans
generations.
Pooch and the
Moochers: And as long as it pays in beer and food, we'll be there.
http://www.reverbnation.com/poochandthemoochers
Youtube Videos
Thursday, September 5, 2013
Featured Musicians: Eric and Kate Avey; bluegrass and accoustic enthusiants.
The Aveys accomplishments, written down, are nothing compared to witnessing a special moment between just these two. Midst their personal photo-shoot, I watched a couple go from happy, posed smiles for the camera, to singing a duet in a brick alley wall, illuminated by a single lamp, and seeing only one another. Their voices, rich and lovingly haunting when melded together in a duet, melt your heart and express a love only music can put form to. Their story alone will warm a heart, but when shown through their passion for music, one can understand how they've come so far, and be inspired to follow what similar dreams they harbor in their own hearts.
Please to be sure to catch Eric and Kate out at their next show. Seeing their magic live is more than anyone can put words to. I hope this article captures enough of their story and their essence to drive you to help them further their musical careers. Thank you.
Eric and Kate Avey. Local Musicians from Waynesboro, PA, involved in several traditional bluegrass and acoustic bands.
Strung Tight. The Boro Boogie Pickers.
The Reckoning. Mountain Ride.
Bluegrass, acoustic, solo, duos, bands
encompassing up to seven members.
Local venues. Free gigs. A nine-state
tour.
Eric and Kate Avey
are an inspirational musical couple from Waynesboro, PA, involved in
a variety of bluegrass and acoustic bands spanning the local area,
and they allow passion to drive them in all their dreams. From the
day they met, music has been the central focus of Eric and Kate's
lives. Married four months after meeting one another, they met
through a band practice (Eric on drums and Kate spectating) and have
spent the past thirteen years of their marriage being guided by the
magic of music they've both been involved in since children.
Eric,
who is experienced in instruments including the guitar, bass, drum,
keys, banjo, mandolin,
and many more, is self-taught in all his musical career. Although he
was never a part of high-school band or similar, he's been into
creating music since he listened to his first Grateful Dead CD, and
his mother purchased him his first guitar. Kate has had a talent
with harmonious vocal tunes and several instruments, including the
saxophone, since her days in the school jazz band and singing for the
church choir.
She reflects back on her childhood days, recalling, “I would help
my father work in the barn, and there was always good music playing.”
Additionally, her mother not only put her up for the church choir,
but gave her the saxophone she herself played as a kid. Nowadays,
Kate hopes to pass the same saxophone on to her children, where
already music is a driving force in the Avey family.
“Our
dining room contains a piano, a drum set, and a table,” Eric
describes. “Our living room is filled with music memorabilia. And
it was only in recent years we got cable; our kids were brought up
with music.”
“It's
the people we've met that we consider a part of our biggest
accomplishments,” Eric and Kate share. “Friends come out to our
shows, and meet our other friends, and the circle grows. We're
surrounded by good souls.” It's the community with the passion that
drives the Aveys, and above all, they say their number one goal, “Is
to inspire. To be role models.” Which is not hard to imagine,
considering what they've accomplished so far in their careers, and
where they are going.
A year ago, at Kate's urging, Eric quit his day-job to focus on music
full time. They began booking shows bit by bit, and now play at least
25 shows a month across the span of four bands: Strung Tight, the duo
between Eric and Kate; Mountain Ride, their traditional bluegrass
outlet; The Reckoning, a seven piece acoustic band inspired by the
Grateful Dead album, “Reckoning”; and The Boro Boogie Pickers, a
bluegrass/string band made up of six native musicians from
Waynesboro, PA.
Additionally, Eric created and maintains aveymusic.com, blogs daily,
records music at home, and contributes much more to the
accomplishment of all of his dreams.
“We
know what we want, and we go for it,” Kate says. “There's some
fun to be had in doing something everyone says you can't.”
Already Eric's blog averages 150 views a day, with a steady fifty
regular readers. Starting from having Kate edit his posts daily, to
now being approached and complimented as a writer, Eric continues to
learn and grown in his field. As an artist, his knack for design goes
hand in hand with his talent, as he self teaches himself not only
instruments, but web design, writing, the handling and workings of
recording equipment, and more.
Between the bands and their personal projects, the Aveys stay busy,
and they like it that way.
“It's
the diversity that comes with so many bands,” they agree they
enjoy, although at heart Eric and Kate agree that playing bluegrass
is their favorite genre of choice, followed closely by acoustic.
“It's the unity. Anyone who knows bluegrass knows it universally.
You can sit in and play and it's like you've been playing together
for years. We've met talented bluegrass musicians from the ages 19 to
65.”
In the end, though,
they live to play live – no matter the genre. To be surrounded by
positive energy, and to share it. To be welcomed by a venue, greeted
with hospitality and friendship. To have a stage awaiting them, not
just a dark corner in a bar. They say their dream is to do this full
time, with a crowd waiting for them, merchandise to sell, a street
team, a crew to set up their equipment, and free drinks. Just
recently concluding the end of a nine day tour, where they traveled
2,238 miles throughout five states, including areas of New England,
with the band Mountain Ride, the Aveys got a taste of what it is to
travel for music, and it's spurred them on even more so to
accomplishing their dreams.
From where they've
began, the Aveys said they've always had this outcome, and more, in
the back of their minds. “You want it, you visualize it, you make
it happen. Either you do it right, or you do it twice. Life's been a
whirlwind, but we're just doing what we've wanted.”
The tour, inspiring
people, and so much more have all accumulated into an inspiring story
of what people can accomplish when following their dreams without
compromising. Enjoying the pride and humility of playing sold-out
shows, of writing the first original song (which Eric contributes
greatly to Kate's encouragement), of selling albums and seeing people
in the crowd sing along to their original tunes; Eric and Kate find
more to reflect on in their musical careers, and how far they've
come.
“In
the beginning we were at bars, passing out demos. Now, the work is
coming to us.”
“It's
about finding your right scene,” he shares. “The right venue for
your music. You can't play jazz at a bar that attracts punk-rockers.
It's hard, but find what's right for you.” Eric also advises on
having a product; not just t-shirts and stickers, but a CD for fans
to share, for that is the way music gets shared. Through one person
listening and another person hearing, the cycle continues.
“We've
seen the in's and out's. We've learned how to book more efficiently,
and how to use our time more wisely. The more professional you
present yourself, the better people will take you. It's the little
extras.”
Eric isn't just
professional, however. Him and Kate are both personable people. Kate
admires Eric's talent for evaluating a crowd at a show, and having a
song for everybody, in order to give them what they want when they
come out to a show.
“If
I have to free-style for the guy in the corner who looks like he
likes hip-hop, I will,” Eric says.
From paid shows to
free shows, the Aveys admit every show counts. “It's great to play
a free gig, and get booked for three paid gigs through that.” They
also never let anything knock them down. After every show, the couple
reflects on the good and the bad, how to improve and what went well.
Constantly in sync, they flow together in their goals and ambitions,
leading their dreams to come through effortlessly.
Music
is everything to the Aveys. Without it, they would not have their
family, their friends, each other, or their dreams. Without their
instruments and their ability to play, they say they would have
nothing; constant communication, the determination to not compromise
their goals, and their respect for one another and the scene around
them help them to power through. Throughout
their life they hope to stay who they are as parents, friends,
lovers, and musicians, doing what they love and going higher.
In the future, Eric
and Kate have plans for several of the bands. Mountain Ride is
currently seeking a full time banjo and mandolin player; the
experience so far with Mountain Ride has been a rewarding learning
experience, and now they're ready for a dedicated band membership.
Coming up in 2014 will make the appearance of CDs from Strung Tight
and Mountain Ride, although no official dates have been announced.
They would also like to thank their friends and family, a special
shout-out to Roy Pitz (who owns a brewing company in Chambersburg,
PA), and Jerry Rigged from Chambersburg, PA. Additionally, the Aveys
send a thanks to any venue that ever debuted a bluegrass show
featuring them, and giving the music a chance.
“You
just have to get out there, and have fun.”
Eric, Kate, and
their bands can be found at the following links, as well as official
contact for booking and comments:
aveymusic.com
facebook.com/eric.avey
twitter.com/aveymusic
instagram.com/aveymusic
reverbnation.com/aveymusic
Upcoming Show Dates
Include:
09/05/13 Strung
Tight at JoJo's in Frederick, MD
09/06/13 Strung
Tight at Dogwood Tavern in Falls Church, VA
09/07/13 The
Reckoning at Opera House Live in Shepherdstown, WV
09/08/13 Mountain
Ride at Taverna 5450 in Fairfield, PA
09/11/13 Strung
Tight at Always Ron's in Hagerstown, MD
09/12/13 Eric's
Open Mic at Taverna 5450 in Fairfield, PA
09/13/13 Strung
Tight at Pete's Old Towne in New Cumberland, PA
09/14/13 Strung
Tight at Porch Fest in Hagerstown, MD
09/14/13 Strung
Tight at Paddy's Pub in Charles Town, WV
For a
full list of tour dates up through 2014, please visit:
http://aveymusic.com/upcoming-shows/
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