Archives For Daily Discovery
The flight was impossibly early, arriving in Chicago at 7:45 local time. I was greeted with a December arctic blast as I exited the airport and launched into a stacked day of meetings, twenty-ounce coffee in hand. The Blue Line rail delivered me gracefully through the clear morning, its lofted tracks threading through a serene downtown urbanscape. I crunched snow between the offices of various creatives and music industry friends I’d come to know over the last several years. It was important to explore relationships that had only existed in email threads, or at best, a fleeting backstage beer at Lollapalooza.
By the time I wrapped meetings ten hours later, it was dark. The temperature had dropped, and I felt the frost creeping in to my toes. I ducked into Martyrs, a neighborhood club on North Lincoln Avenue. The 400-cap room was warm with exposed brick, a deep stage, and they served coffee at the bar. I was thrilled to stumble across the first band on the bill, Kane Place Record Club.
I’ve since learned that this quintet met at a weekly record club held at a home on Kane Place in Milwaukee. I imagine the tradition starting during a frigid Wisconsin winter, co-eds gathering around the hearth to share wax while the hellish blizzard raged outside. The Kane Place Record Club spawned an eponymous band that fuses disparate elements of jazz, hip-hop, classical, and R&B into surreal, cinematic journeys.
Kane Place Record Club performs at the jazz joint in Lewis Carroll’s fever dream. We’re drawn into 10,000 Timpani by the clinking of glasses. A tight snare-hat beat ramps up then dissolves abruptly into time-ticking guitar, counting down as we hear a vortex building out of chilling violin scrapes and discordant piano. The track’s exhilarating whirl is in full-tilt when bassist Eris Campbell (the Flea-esque runaway star of the show) and drummer Maurice Lidell lock in.
Enter Jon Scott; whose cool yet crazed vocal casts everything in blue. He’s the maniacal conductor of our ride that careens, stutters, and glides through a loungey bridge, the most transcendent passage, before ultimately collapsing into a noisy Motown breakdown and casting us out with a mélange of riffs and plucks. We’re thrown to the edge of a sonic cliff, panting, bewildered, and riddled with earworms.
Take a breath, and dare to venture further down the rabbit hole with Kane Place Record Club’s self-titled debut. Other highlights include the darker, surfy Sleep, and the epic stomper Sorry for the Mess.
– Whitaker Elledge
See Kane Place Record club perform at South-by-Southwest 2014 in Austin. Wednesday, March 12 @ Cielo Lounge, with more dates TBA.
Here at Cause A Scene we always jump at the opportunity to spotlight local artists and we love to keep tabs on past CAS performers, and Nashville-based folk pop outfit Charlie and the Foxtrots falls into both of those categories. Having played a CAS show this past October with fellow Nashvillians, Smooth Hound Smith, Charlie and the Foxtrots have been a talent we have been keeping a close eye on.
In early 2013, lead vocalist Chas Wilson began assembling The Foxtrots, forming a seven piece band, drawing their sound from classic folk and bluegrass influences, fusing it all together with modern pop. In only a few months time, Charlie and the Foxtrots recorded and released their first EP, and they have not slowed their rapid pace in the time since.
Currently on the final leg of a regional east coast tour, the band has also spent the last several months in and out of the studio, recording their followup EP, which is due to release this spring. The video for the first single, “The Man I Am,” from their forthcoming EP released just last week on AmericanSongwriter.com. Watch the video for “The Man I Am” below and keep up with Charlie and the Foxtrots at the band’s website for the official release date of their sophomore EP.
– Christian Lerchenfeld
– Bailey Basham
Safe In Blue- ‘Song I Believe In’
The Rickshaw Roadshow is a five-piece outfit from the Johnson City, Tennessee area. The band employs the use of wide range of instruments to create a folksy rock and roll sound with a hint of blues. The perfect musical lovechild of The Avett Brothers and The Black Keys, The Rickshaw Roadshow is not just your run of the mill garage band; these guys are serious about their craft and have been building their own unique sound for years.. With no member tied down to exclusively play any one instrument, the amount of instrument swapping that occurs during each show is more than enough to keep the audience engrossed in the performance. Having delved into music at relatively young ages, each of the five members of The Rickshaw Roadshow uses their musical and lyrical experience to craft unique, original tracks that are easy to appreciate.
The band’s debut album was released in February of this year. Two new members have been added since the album hit the streets. Vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Austin Barrett shared that the band has “a slew of new songs” and that their sound has become “much more complex but has solidified at the same time”. Barrett also offered, “We like to think of our first CD as a collective of ideas of all of our writing styles. As we all spend more time together and collect more experiences, however, we start to come up with exactly the same ideas”.
The Rickshaw Roadshow is in the studio right now tracking for their second album. Barrett says the band is “very excited for where the sound is going.” I’m sure the fans are just as anxious to get their hands and ears on those new tracks too.
– Bailey Basham