Thursday, August 28, 2014
END OF SUMMER SALE!
We won't promise you that any of this stuff will aid you in back-to-school preparation... unless loud music helps in that department.
OK, it's on. The end of Summer sale is going from now til Sept. 1st. 20% off in the store when you use the code 'SUMMERBUMMER'. U.S. customers only please, shipping is too friggin' expensive. New stuff added to the store as well and all orders come with free goods! Do it! http://hexrecords.bigcartel.com/
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
INTERVIEW: TONY WEINBENDER (FEST)
Gainesville Fest. Or just simply known as Fest. It needs no special title. People know what it is. The first year that I went I piled into
a rented minivan with six other friends, some of which I barely knew. My name was on the rental because I was
the only one old enough to rent a car.
We drove straight from New York to Florida. It took about 20 hours and I think I did about 12 hours
straight driving for no good reason other than being a determined road
warrior. I was afraid of an entire
town drowned in beer and the accompanying annoyance that comes with being a
straight edge guy amongst hordes of drunk people. But I had to admit, that year (and every year since) people
at Fest have been nothing short of awesome. That’s the great thing about Fest- 5,000 people from
everywhere take over a small college town and appreciate that they’re wearing
shorts, watching punk bands, and having fun in the sun on the cusp of
Winter. How could that put anyone
in a bad mood?
After communicating via e-mail for
a few years with organizer Tony Weinbender about press stuff he suggested a
phone call for this interview.
Truly a pre-internet dude at heart. I furiously scribbled as he talked so he will have to
forgive me if I paraphrased some answers slightly, or just edited out bits
because my hand cramped up.
Before getting to the actual
questions Tony went into his history of growing up in Roanoke, Virginia and
making punk connections the old-fashioned way: go to shows out of town, play in a band, meet people face to
face, remember those people, play their town, and have them play in yours. From connecting with regional heroes
Avail, to founding the MacRock Fest in Harrisonburg, to moving to Florida and
becoming a full-time roadie for Less Than Jake, to working in-house at No Idea
Records, and eventually establishing Fest, and it growing to be one of the
biggest and best punk events in the U.S. (13 years running!) Tony has come a
long way. Here’s what transpired
of our lengthy conversation.
What do you think separates Gainesville Fest from other
fests happening around the U.S.?
It’s definitely different. When we grew up there seemed to be more of a format with
various fests. More of the
underground hardcore and punk that came from the DIY culture would all gather
in one big venue for the whole day or weekend, which could get kind of dull,
just hanging out in this one building all day. But when I lived in Virginia and put together the MacRock
festivals I applied something I learned from going to CMJ in NYC, and that was
using multiple venues. So when I
did end moving to Gainesville and eventually putting together Fest I wanted to
have multiple venues. It’s
something different, ya know? I
also wanted to have a lot of diversity of bands that played, different styles
of music. That way, you have a
hardcore band playing in one venue at the same time that a punk band is playing
at a venue next door. It gives the
attendees the power, instead of just sitting in one venue all day, waiting for
whatever bands you wanted to see.
With Fest I wanted to do this fun and exciting thing for people and to
be able to help my friends who were in bands. Ya know, give these bands some exposure. I mean, it might even be a big thing,
but with certain bands, especially smaller ones, if they play Fest it could really
do wonders for their band.
Also,
I think, with Fest, it’s this huge community, like a family sort of thing. People travel from all over the world
for it and we all get together to enjoy this thing. I think that is part of what separates us from other fests
happening.
It
seems like the popular format for a lot of fests to follow is to have one big
venue with multiple stages and it doesn’t always feel like a real community
sort of thing to me. With Fest
we’ve got these messageboards, and facebook groups, and other things where
people just spend the whole year talking about Fest. It’s weird.
It’s almost like a con.
A con? Like a
scam?
No, like a comic con.
Like San Diego Comic Con, ya know?
The people who are into those sorts of things just create this whole
world around it and talk about it all year, ya know? Fest has people following it like that. It’s weird. When we first started doing it we used to call it a family
reunion because so many of our friends and friends bands would all get together
this one weekend of the year to be here and hang out. Some times I take for granted that what we do is really
awesome.
Do you go to other fests and get a feel for what they do,
and maybe apply it to Gainesville Fest?
Well, a lot of the fests I’ve gone to over the last several
years have been smaller. I don’t
go to the bigger ones really because you’re usually stuck at one venue the
whole time and I don’t really care for that. But I like to go to Best Friends Day up in Richmond because
I’m from Virginia and a lot of the bands I like and am friends with end up
playing. I also went to
Insubordination Fest and that was a lot of fun. I like the smaller fests because I can actually hang out at
them. I can’t really do that at
Fest because I’m generally too busy running things.
I
will say, though, that Fun Fun Fun Fest in Austin was really great. They have a different format than we
do, but the guys who put it together- we’re all cut from the same cloth. Because of Austin being the type of
town that it is they can do things on a much grander scale than we can. But the organizers really open their
arms to us at Fest. It’s like a
big fiesta there. It’s really cool
to see people from our scene do really huge things. Like, they just did Slayer! But they’ll still make room to have a band like Joyce Manor
play, and then still book smaller shows throughout the year. Those guys who book FFF Fest come from
the DIY scene. One of them is
involved with Chaos In Tejas and that’s a really cool Fest as well that uses
multiple venues. And the best part
is Austin is cool with it. They’re
used to stuff like that happening.
I know Fest is a job throughout the year for you, but when
do you generally start planning each year’s event?
Well, Fest always happens at the end of October. So for a couple weeks after it happens
I basically do clean up for a couple weeks afterwards. Most of that is paying bands who took
off before they were able to get paid, or forget to come by the office and get
paid. So I’m tying up loose ends
with that stuff, and a lot of accounting things. Lots of little details. Curtis, who does Best Friends Day, is actually a certified
CPA, so he comes down and helps out on that end.
So
after that is Thanksgiving, and then Christmas, and I generally hang out with
family during that time. We
usually get started in January.
That’s when I begin talking to venues and get their feedback and ideas
about what was working for them, or not working for them, during Fest. It gives them a couple months to
reflect on it, and we just work out how to proceed with next year’s Fest. I like to get all that stuff cleared up
early.
I
really don’t have a lot of vacation.
Thanksgiving and December, that’s about it.
How many people do you have on staff to help you, not
counting the couple hundred volunteers you have every year?
I’m actually the only full time person on the payroll. Sarah Goodwin has worked on Fest for
the last four or five years. She
started interning with basically no experience, but picked things up really
quick. She does a lot of contact
with bands after I book them, produce the guidebooks- that big book we make
every year, and she uploads stuff to the site. Last year we had another person named Sara intern as well,
and she has moved up to dealing with sponsors, hotels, and social media
stuff. Rich (Mineo, Horsebites)
does our artwork. Ted Barnes does
all our layout stuff. Steve
Wocziack does our website. They
all live in different states. Lots
of people help out with volunteering, and now some of them get paid to do other
random stuff, like video work. We
can all work through the internet.
That never used to be the case.
I’ve actually never met Ted Barnes in person, but he’s done work for us
for years. It’s a small group of
people overall. But then the week
before Fest a lot of friends come into town to do work, like sound guys. They all make the whole circus run.
Are there bands that you approach every year about playing,
but for one reason or another they cannot play? And by that I mean dream lineup type bands?
For years it was the Descendents, but this year they are
finally playing. The Descendents
happened this year. I generally
try to keep it interesting and add a lot of new bands. But I’ve always wanted to have the Murder
City Devils, the Weakerthans, and Superchunk play, but it never works out. It’s not even a money thing. It’s usually just scheduling. I wanted Big Business to play, but it
couldn’t happen because they’re going to Europe or something.
So you got The Melvins instead!
Right! But
yeah, it generally comes down to scheduling and I can’t blame anyone for
that. There have been bands who
dropped off because they got offered a spot on some big tour instead. You got to go for that, ya know? If we asked some band to play, and they
couldn’t because they were going to Europe and feel bad about it, it’s like,
‘go to Europe. That opportunity
does not always come around’.
But
as far as dream list goes it gets smaller and smaller, as we’ve had a lot of
bands we’ve always wanted to play already play. But things will always pop up. Bands will get back together and do some shows that you
wouldn’t expect. This year it was
Mineral, and I’m really excited that they’re playing. At this point we have a bit of sway and have been able to
re-unite some bands, like we’re waving some magic wand.
Such as?
A few years ago Seaweed played. That was incredible.
Last year it was Knapsack.
Getting Snuff to come out one year was a dream come true. Getting From Ashes Rise was a big deal
because when they were around they never came down this way. And a lot of these bands are down for
it because it’s not some big deal where there’s a big backstage for bands. They hang out in the street with everyone
else. Most bands are really into
that idea. Some like having a
backstage, but for the most part, that’s part of the appeal of the bigger bands
we get- they like the idea of everyone just hanging out together.
Playing off of that, are there bands you’d like to have play
that you know just wouldn’t mesh with what was going on at Fest?
I do like diversifying the lineup. I’d like to diversify it even more. But I think it would hurt things at
this point if we were to diversify it even more. A few years back we put on the Harvest Of Hope Fest and at
that we were able to diversify it more.
We could have hip-hop groups play, but it wouldn’t work at Fest even
though I love hip-hop and grew up with it. I wouldn’t ever have something like DJ’s, or trip-hop
bullshit. But I do like the more
indie hip-hop stuff, and wouldn’t mind venturing into that.
Overall,
I think my taste in music is representative of what Fest is. That’s what I like. I’m 38, but I still get goosebumps when
I hear Avail. I know it sounds
corny, but I love that there’s an ‘emo revival’ happening with a lot of bands
now. I really liked all those
bands. I think labels like Top
Shelf and Tiny Engines, who are putting out new bands that sound like old
bands, like Prawn, are great. I
mean, they just released a new Braid record! That was huge for me when we got them to play Fest.
So, switching gears, what’s the most difficult part of
putting together Fest every year?
I’m a very organized person. I’m a go-getter.
I work very hard at this every year, and put a lot of time in. So it drives me nuts when people muck
up the works, like city municipalities.
They’re not used to what we do.
When people talk about ‘red tape’ and ‘jumping through hoops’- it’s
really true. The smallest things
can be really tough. It would be
great if there was just one person who oversaw everything. But instead you have to go through a
bunch of different people for different things associated with codes and
whatever, and then you call that person, and they shuffle you around to someone
else. The buerocracy of it is
nuts.
It sounds like the plot of a Parks and Recreation episode.
It’s just like Parks and Rec and I’m Leslie Knoppe. It’s like the people in the beurocracy
just don’t want to work. They just
want to sit around. They don’t
understand that people outside of government want to do things, and have a
deadline for doing them.
I
know I make them sound bad, but most of these people are nice, they just don’t
get what we’re doing. Of all the
groups we have to deal with I have to admit that the police have been the
nicest. They will go to bat for
us. They have stood up for us at
city hall and talked us up.
They’re the ones who see the attendees at Fest every year and see that
they’re great people, not city council members. And out of all the people we go through in the city for Fest
we tax the cops time the most, and they’re the ones who end up helping us the
most.
Another
thing that can be difficult are some businesses that can be slack. It used to be more of an issue, like old
venues that aren’t around anymore.
We’d talk to them months ahead of time and then they’d just shut down
right before Fest.
Related to that, unlike some other fests that take place in
large cities- like CMJ in NYC and FFF Fest in Austin- Fest takes place in a
pretty small city and I’d imagine you probably have a significant relationship
with the city that might be outside the norm?
Honestly, if Fest took place in a bigger city I think it
would be a lot easier because bigger cities have things in place for bigger
events like this, as they are more used to large events. They have the facilities in place. Gainesville doesn’t necessary have all
those facilities in place. But
after Fest 10 the city seemed to realize, ‘oh shit- a lot of people come here,
we need to check in on this’. They
could have been real bad about it, but we have a fairly good relationship with
the city. In the past we never had
to worry about fire certification.
But now the fire marshal shows up and is asking about banners that bands
hang on the stage. I end up having
to call the manufacturer of the banner and ask if they’re fire resistant. They have no idea. They’re made of vinyl, how should I
know? It’s weird little things
like that. I’m like the lobbyist
for Fest. But I can’t complain, ya
know?
A
place like Austin though, they get it.
In Gainesville, at first, the venues were hard to have get on
board. They would charge me for
everything, even though we were the ones doing all the work throughout the
weekend. I didn’t get it at
first. But I know a lot more
now. I guess the biggest benefit
of Gainesville is that it is a small city and there is definitely a community
vibe here. And also doing pre-Fest
in Tampa has been great. Dealing
with some of the venues there has been great. It’s different.
That leads me to my last question- why pre-Fest? Why add more days to the Fest in a
different city?
There’s a few reasons.
First, our PBR rep (PBR sponsors much of Fest) lives in Tampa. They pushed us to do something there. And the venues were really cool. The initial idea was to do a spin-off
of Fest, like in the Spring. We
could do more of a variety of bands, like metal and hip-hop. It would have been like Harvest Of
Hope, just without the camping.
The camping bit of that fest was terrible. I’ll never touch that shit again.
Secondly,
Tampa made sense because more and more people were flying into Fest early every
year so we thought we’d give them something to do. We had pre-Fest shows in Gainesville that were selling out,
like on the Tuesday and Wednesday before Fest. Plus, for most people it’s cheaper to fly into Tampa than
Gainesville and a lot of people were doing that anyways. The venues in Tampa are bigger as
well. So we thought we’d try it
out. It was comfortable. We had 668 people buy passes last year
for it, before people even came to the door just buy a ticket. It wasn’t great. We lost a little bit of money, but we
could afford it. It was nothing
drastic. It was definitely worth
it. As of now, we’ve already sold
more passes than last year, so we’re on track to do pretty well with it.
But
we just try to put on the best production that we can do and the people who do
come out give it good reviews.
People talk about it.
People last year were bragging about it. Ybor is a cool city to hang out in. It felt like the early years of
Fest. So I think it’s working.
At
the end of the day though, if doing Fest sucks more than working a regular day
job than I’ll stop doing it.
Gainesville Fest runs from October 31st- November 2nd this year. Pre-Fest in Tampa/Ybor City is October 29th and 30th. Get info on the insane amount of wild bands playing, as well as passes, here:
Tuesday, August 5, 2014
SUMMER KEEPS ROLLING AND SO DO THE REVIEWS
Somehow it has already skipped to August. Yesterday it might as well have been February. Where does the time go? Oh, I know... fiending over hordes of records in the never-ending quest for that perfect one! But in all honesty, yeah, I listen to a lot of stuff. Here's the latest batch, including a couple year-end contenders in that pile.
BREADWINNER, “Burner” LP
I’m a good 20 years late to
the game here, but this re-issued LP collection from these early 90’s Richmond
trailblazers is pretty wild when put into a historical perspective. This was one of the harder-to-find
Record Store Day releases this year, and not because it sold out quickly. I think it’s more because most places
didn’t bother to carry it due to the obscure nature of the band. Breadwinner was a band’s band in the strictest
sense and I say that because basically anyone who does talk about this band is
a musician themselves and cites them as strong influences. Their output was minimal (a couple
7”s), their tenure was brief, but in 1991 some brilliant dudes down in Virginia
were mixing up mostly instrumental and metallic-leaning noise rock with math
rock and serving it up to what I’m sure amounted to a small handful of
dedicated noiseniks (as these things tend to go). While listening to it now it feels a bit tepid, maybe not
terribly adventurous, but like I stated earlier, when put into the context of
this being done over 20 years ago, when styles such as this were quite nascent,
it makes it seem like kind of a big deal.
Indie giant Merge re-issued this stuff into a cool package and it clocks
in at only around 20 minutes, but worth investigating for the history. (Merge)
EVERY TIME I DIE, “From Parts Unknown”
How does a band on it’s
seventh LP keep things interesting?
It gets tougher with time.
ETID really brought back a raw, vicious intensity on “Ex-Lives”. I’m not sure what it was about that
record, but it’s some of the best stuff they ever did. On “From Parts Unknown” it feels like
some of that revived intensity is lacking and some of it feels rushed, though I
will say that opening your record with the lyrics “blow your fucking brains
out” over and over again is a pretty good way to start. The first half is incredibly fast, and
has the lion’s share of ripping cuts.
A-side closer “Moor” might be the most interesting song on the record,
going with an obtuse piano thud at the beginning and end, which is fairly
adventurous. The B-side, though,
accounts for a lot of filler. The
exceptions being the ending of “El Dorado” that summons up a massive
Down-styled riff and Keith Buckley’s sing-along worthy chant of “crush your
allies!” (take that Hatebreed!),
and “Idiot” with it’s harkening back to some “Hot Damn” styled riffy
metalcore. As always, Buckley,
while occasionally overtly wordy, is a deft lyricist and comes up with some
great wordplay. Again, not a bad
effort (the Mastodon-meets-hipster cover art is pretty awful though), and
certainly an overall fun listen, but not the band’s defining moment. (Epitaph)
FUCKED UP, “Glass Boys”
The first song has a great
drum intro and could be a perfect sample for some late 80’s hip-hop group. But “Glass Boys” doesn’t have the
ambition or grand ideas put forth on previous records, even though the lyrics
are excellent as always. Also, this
record is shorter overall from past efforts (some people would cite that as a
positive). The record is bookended
by a couple great songs expounding on the query of getting to be an old punker
and not connecting with youth the way you once did (I can relate). J. Mascis lending back up vocals to
“Led By Hand”, which sounds kind of like a Dino Jr song anyway, is the other
great track on this record. Still,
there is a good deal of what amounts to filler on this outing. At this point the only thing,
soundwise, truly connecting Fucked Up to hardcore is Pink Eye’s gravelly
bark. It’s definitely their
slowest and most abundantly melodic work to date. But, I’m more partial to “Hidden World” and “David Comes To
Life”. (Matador)
GREYS, “If Anything”
So here’s an easy contender
for record of the year for me.
After hearing snippets of promising material from previous hard-to-find
releases Toronto’s Greys lays down a hell of an LP. Imagine Nirvana covering Drive Like Jehu, getting noisy,
raw, and still having a wild hair for weird guitar antics. That pique your interest yet? I know I’m stoked. They have a lot in common with fellow
countrymen in Metz in terms of sound and presentation, but Greys seems to put a
bit more dynamics into their songs.
For an idea of how this band sounds I’ll refer to a great live picture on
the insert of the record where a member of the band is riding his guitar like a
surfboard on a stage monitor while another member kicks out the jams, a couple
people in the audience cheering and smiling, and yet another person in the
crowd holds his hands over his mouth agape, eyes as wide as dinner plates at
the stage antics playing out before him.
That’s a sign of an awesome band and one hell of a kick-ass record. Necessary. (Car Park Records)
HERO DISHONEST, “Kaikki Hajoaa”
7”
You may listen to this and
have the passing thought of what people who have no clue about hardcore music
often think about this type of music- “you can’t understand what they’re
saying!” Well, yes, some of the
vocals on this 7” are downright terrible.
But the dude is also singing in Finnish, so there’s that if you can’t
figure what he’s yelling about.
The music is mostly straight ahead hardcore punk, perfect for basement
stomping. Some of it is mid-tempo,
some of it is very fast. I think
the third song on here is a cover, and honestly, I think I like it the best.
The rest does not really faze me.
(Peterwalkee Records)
MOUTHEATER, “Passing Key”
Another year-end favorite is
rearing it’s ugly head to muscle in on other records vying for a spot. Fuck those other records. Moutheater have been cranking out grungy,
dirty, mean-spirited noisecore for the last seven years or so and this is their
first record in over three years.
I think it’s high time they once again secured their place at (or near)
the top of the heap. But what’s
this? There are several songs that
dabble in catchy riffing and almost sung vocals that strongly suggest an older
Queens Of the Stone Age influence coming on. While it is a surprise I can easily hang with that,
especially when the rest of this monster is doused in unabashed Unsane love and
unstoppable face-mashing riffs. If
you see this band and you are not hurling empty beer (or other beverage) cans
everywhere while punching holes into drywall you have seriously not listened to
this correctly… or you just have a
lot of respect for venues. At the
very least you will think heavily about doing those things, and then later on
you’ll set fire to a dumpster or something. Get this now and play until it melts your turn table. (Anthems Of the Undesirable)
SOKEA PISTE,
“Valikasi” 12"
Dark
goth-y punk. It leans more on the
punk than it does on Bauhaus, but I’m sure the love is there. The entire record is sung in Finnish,
but the lyric sheet has translations (the songs are about things
punk-related… for real) for us
cretins who only speak a single language (and sometimes not even
coherently). Regardless, get ready
for chilly vibes, driving punk nihilism, and a cold sense of melody on
top. These songs also feel a bit
lengthy, but I guess that’s their way of pulling you in. For one reason or another I’m sort of
reminded of PiL, if it were a little more crusty and less refined. (Peterwalkee Records)
SPIT SPEWING SNAKES, “Steady Sinking Stone” 7”
This Michigan-area band
cranks out 5 songs on a single-sided 7” with some insane screen printing on the
B-side. I’m reminded of early
Ceremony, as it’s nearly power violence speed, but still catchy and fun, while
being aggressive and smart all at once.
For some reason they decided to do an AFI cover on here too. I think that band’s for the birds, and
I have no clue if SSS is doing their own version of it, but it’s really damn
fast too. This thing is packed
with extra goodies (poster, stickers, good design, etc), so if you like your
records to be more than music this is obviously a pretty good place to
start. (Dropping Bombs)
Thursday, July 24, 2014
INTERVIEW- JOE MCKAY/ THIS IS HARDCORE FEST
I thought it might be a fun idea to talk with a couple people who organize fests around the US. A long time ago I booked a couple fests here in Syracuse and it made me want to rip all the hair I had on my head at the time right out. I don't know how others manage to do this and consistently make it a quality event.
I'm starting with Joe Hardcore, who is the main fellow behind This Is Hardcore Fest in Philly. Yeah, it might seem a little weird for this site to cover that particular fest, but honestly every year I see the lineup and it looks incredible. And every year I find myself being unable to attend. Some year I'll make it happen. This year's event (which actually kicks off today!) looks just as awesome with bands like Converge, Slapshot, All Else Failed, and Turmoil all playing the same day. Guuuuuuhhhhh (sorry, wiping away the drool). So anyway, read on about what goes into this monster event and how they manage to pull it off.
When do you generally start planning each year's TIHC Fest, and can you give a basic outline of how and when things happen? Do you have a schedule or playbook sort of organization to putting all the pieces together each year?
The team this year also included Meghan Harper who is an amazing person with insane eye for detail and had alot of hands on time in compiling data for the app and sites as well as input as to ideas for the lineup. It was nice for someone to come in and take the place of Bob Wilson who moved to Florida to start FYA fest .
Jen Reisberg worked on alot of PR elements and maintained a social connection to the many sites that we depend on to talk about the fest.
Brooke Hoffman aids in most anything we need her to and is someone to always count on for a solid opinion.
Bob Shedd who worked through being a father and an relenteless work schedule put us on the map with a few companies that we now have solid relations with. Although his time is limited, he is a great idea guy and a solid team player.
Vanessa D is our newest member and someone who will be developing our own PR team year round to help keep the momentum going and give us more insights and push through the off season and such. Her drive and energy is unreal and she is going to get us places we've never been before.
Big shout outs to the support given to us still from Sean Agnew of R5 productions, a brother, mentor and most helpful person alive.
I'm starting with Joe Hardcore, who is the main fellow behind This Is Hardcore Fest in Philly. Yeah, it might seem a little weird for this site to cover that particular fest, but honestly every year I see the lineup and it looks incredible. And every year I find myself being unable to attend. Some year I'll make it happen. This year's event (which actually kicks off today!) looks just as awesome with bands like Converge, Slapshot, All Else Failed, and Turmoil all playing the same day. Guuuuuuhhhhh (sorry, wiping away the drool). So anyway, read on about what goes into this monster event and how they manage to pull it off.
What do you think separates This Is Hardcore from other punk and hardcore fests happening around the US?
Aside from the tenure of being around from the end of Hellfest and Posi Numbers, which is now an entire generation and almost a half in hardcore
terms? We tend to go the extra mile, push the envelope as to how many
bands we can fit on a bill, how many kids we can push into a room and
how wide of a berth we allow this is hardcore to become to encompass as
many bands from multiple periods and parts of hardcore's past and
present while maintaining the basic core values of your average hall
rental show.
Do you attend other fests (either here or internationally) and get a
feel for how others do things and maybe apply it to how TIHC is run?
The basis of TIHC was to not do what others
mentioned above had done and sorta bring it back to the basics. this was
in 2006 mind you, since then we've been through 8 fest and are on the
eve of our 9th and evolution has pushed us above the pack and into the
forerunner spot. This is because many things and none of which is based
on my attendance at other fests. I would attribute the success to the
fest to the support given to it and me from the bands, labels and scene
at large.
The reciprocal relationship that allows TIHC to make the moves and bring in the bands because the support is there is really how we stay afloat.
The reciprocal relationship that allows TIHC to make the moves and bring in the bands because the support is there is really how we stay afloat.
When do you generally start planning each year's TIHC Fest, and can you give a basic outline of how and when things happen? Do you have a schedule or playbook sort of organization to putting all the pieces together each year?
Lineup sets the precedence for many aspects
but ultimately the template from year to year is adjusted based on what
works and what didn't last year. This year we are looking at 62 bands,
72 if you count the side stage and nearly 100 if you count the after
parties.
next year will see less bands overall but more time and different aspects evolving to make the fest less of an over exhausting experience.
Having the set players in the staff from production, to stage manager to online team really have crafted the fest into something that runs year round based on the timing in which we confirm bands and the deadlines set by us to get announcments together.
although a year of stress, the sillyness that unfolds keeps the work from being too daunting.
How many people do you have helping you with each year's event and what sorts of roles do they play in supporting you?
next year will see less bands overall but more time and different aspects evolving to make the fest less of an over exhausting experience.
Having the set players in the staff from production, to stage manager to online team really have crafted the fest into something that runs year round based on the timing in which we confirm bands and the deadlines set by us to get announcments together.
although a year of stress, the sillyness that unfolds keeps the work from being too daunting.
How many people do you have helping you with each year's event and what sorts of roles do they play in supporting you?
I have Greg Daly who is not only one of the premier tour managers
in the underground, but one of the most solid punk figures in all
aspects. His ideas, zeal for keeping things simple and punk while very
professional really have made a difference in the way the fest
interfaces with the bands.
Dan Oesterich from Brooklyn being our stage guy really has made the stage and turn arounds flawless.
Having Andrew Memphis Murphy as tech support on stage for the last 8 years makes each sets changeover effortless for the bands.
Chris X being the ubiquitious online figure as well as maintaining a positive relations with all of our vendors in merch land really helps on a daily basis and takes a huge workload day of during the fest off of my back.
Liam O being the coordinator for all food vendors is another key aspect of the growing fest. from having a great relationship with the city food inspectors to knowing the paperwork and having excellent taste and choices in what the kids want, its a job I couldn't do in a million years.
Joel Murphy is my silent partner. Whether its any of the above aspects or his amazing art and web design that make the presence of TIHC stand out and above, he is the rock and guidance that allows me to call at 3 am with an assortment of questions or thoughts to ponder. He comes up and directs all of the tents going up and coming down and is very hands on during the fest and makes the need to do things happen.
Sunny Singh evolved from the guy who videos to the promotional minded bedfellow to the staffer with insight towards booking leads, the social media presence of the fest along with the good natured sillyness that makes what we present online what it is.
Dan Oesterich from Brooklyn being our stage guy really has made the stage and turn arounds flawless.
Having Andrew Memphis Murphy as tech support on stage for the last 8 years makes each sets changeover effortless for the bands.
Chris X being the ubiquitious online figure as well as maintaining a positive relations with all of our vendors in merch land really helps on a daily basis and takes a huge workload day of during the fest off of my back.
Liam O being the coordinator for all food vendors is another key aspect of the growing fest. from having a great relationship with the city food inspectors to knowing the paperwork and having excellent taste and choices in what the kids want, its a job I couldn't do in a million years.
Joel Murphy is my silent partner. Whether its any of the above aspects or his amazing art and web design that make the presence of TIHC stand out and above, he is the rock and guidance that allows me to call at 3 am with an assortment of questions or thoughts to ponder. He comes up and directs all of the tents going up and coming down and is very hands on during the fest and makes the need to do things happen.
Sunny Singh evolved from the guy who videos to the promotional minded bedfellow to the staffer with insight towards booking leads, the social media presence of the fest along with the good natured sillyness that makes what we present online what it is.
The team this year also included Meghan Harper who is an amazing person with insane eye for detail and had alot of hands on time in compiling data for the app and sites as well as input as to ideas for the lineup. It was nice for someone to come in and take the place of Bob Wilson who moved to Florida to start FYA fest .
Jen Reisberg worked on alot of PR elements and maintained a social connection to the many sites that we depend on to talk about the fest.
Brooke Hoffman aids in most anything we need her to and is someone to always count on for a solid opinion.
Bob Shedd who worked through being a father and an relenteless work schedule put us on the map with a few companies that we now have solid relations with. Although his time is limited, he is a great idea guy and a solid team player.
Vanessa D is our newest member and someone who will be developing our own PR team year round to help keep the momentum going and give us more insights and push through the off season and such. Her drive and energy is unreal and she is going to get us places we've never been before.
Big shout outs to the support given to us still from Sean Agnew of R5 productions, a brother, mentor and most helpful person alive.
The
staff of the Electric Factory really come into their own during the
fest and their professionalism gives us blue ribbon level of support to
the bands and customer service for the kids.
TIHC is pretty infamous for the videos you put together each year
advertising the Fest. They're pretty long and usually pretty funny. Is
this something you usually come up with, or a group project?
Sunny and I are the parents but with the
coming fall and new projects, we have included everyone including Bananye West, Thomas Oi and a slew of meme making hooligans to bring the
TIHC humor to an all time high.
Are there bands that approach you each year that you would like to have play but for one reason or another (financial or schedules) it doesn't work out? Are there band that you approach each year that you really want to have play (like dream line-up stuff) but it never works out?
Are there bands that approach you each year that you would like to have play but for one reason or another (financial or schedules) it doesn't work out? Are there band that you approach each year that you really want to have play (like dream line-up stuff) but it never works out?
Burn, Chokehold, and xDisciplexAD would make my top of my
wish list. Ignite is the last hold out of semi active bands that I need
to have on the fest .
Hatebreed was up there but they've now done everything but TIHC so its taken the glimmer out. I prefer solid headliners that are currently kicking ass dabbling lightly with reunions and supporting the working bands today over a reunion fest top to bottom. In the coming years you will see more lineups like this year and that is due entirely because in the past 5 years, every fest ours included have depleted the "OH MY GOD" level bands that kids would die to see.
Hatebreed was up there but they've now done everything but TIHC so its taken the glimmer out. I prefer solid headliners that are currently kicking ass dabbling lightly with reunions and supporting the working bands today over a reunion fest top to bottom. In the coming years you will see more lineups like this year and that is due entirely because in the past 5 years, every fest ours included have depleted the "OH MY GOD" level bands that kids would die to see.
Additionally, are there any bands you'd really like to have play some
year, but they might not quite fit the style of TIHC? Like maybe some
very non-hardcore type band that you're a big fan of?
Obituary, Behemoth, Jedi Mind Tricks, House of Pain, Every
Time I Die. Aside from that I'd like to bring things back to when hc
kids were truly supportive of the undergound movement over short winded
popular trends. I could book any number of flavor of the month fad bands
and kids would be happy, but a long time legend like KRS One would be a
long shot as to reaching the core audience.
What's the most difficult part of putting together each years TIHC fest?
Not
giving up. Not being downtrodden by complaints. Wanting a band and
having to push the limits of what we can spend just to accomodate them
so we know the kids are getting their moneys worth.
I wish I could figure a way to make the payment for bands more equal, keep production high and lower ticket prices..
Money is the root of all the evil in this and in dealing with it, I choose often to make less and less so the fest gets what it needs and everyone walks away happy. Its not a solid business plan, but it makes sense to do it this way.
I wish I could figure a way to make the payment for bands more equal, keep production high and lower ticket prices..
Money is the root of all the evil in this and in dealing with it, I choose often to make less and less so the fest gets what it needs and everyone walks away happy. Its not a solid business plan, but it makes sense to do it this way.
Any big additions/changes, or otherwise exciting things you'd like to mention about this years Fest coming up in July?
Thursday Killswitch is playing alot of Older material
Friday Stephen Brodsky is playing with Converge
Bl'ast has cancelled and Agnostic Front has taken their place.
Alpha Omega has dropped so we've filled the spot with Palehorse
Friday Stephen Brodsky is playing with Converge
Bl'ast has cancelled and Agnostic Front has taken their place.
Alpha Omega has dropped so we've filled the spot with Palehorse
Sunday Madball plays set it off top to bottom with matt henderson flying in to perform with them.
Thanks for the love and support!
Tuesday, July 8, 2014
DIALYSIS GIGS THIS SUMMER
Us old farts will be playing a handful of shows out of town this Summer (and in town as well), including a special rare show from Hex alumni LIKE WOLVES in Rochester on August 3rd. A couple more may pop up before the heat is through, but this is the hub bub as of now:
Friday, July 18th
Bethleham, PA @ Podrum Mahenzi
doors 7, bands 8
$5-7
Dying - http://dyingxvx.com/
To Tremble - http://
Dialysis
https://www.facebook.com/events/242424722619851/
------------------
Saturday, July 19th- Philly. Watching Nothing and Iron Lung, scro'... unless someone wants to hook up a day time matinee?
-------------------
Monday, July 21st
Syracuse, NY
Westcott Community Center
8:30PM. $7
Spoken word/comedy/juggling/deep stuff from TRIAL's
GREG BENNICK
with music from:
EGO DESTROYS (Syracuse)
DIALYSIS (more Syracuse)
VITAL TIMES (how much Syracuse can you take?)
https://www.facebook.com/events/640686826024580/
------------------------
Friday, July 25th
Binghamton, NY
Fitzie's Irish Pub
8:00pm doors 8:30 start
21+ $5
*Bleak (Syracuse)
--http://
*Hell Mary (New Jersey)
--http://
*Dialysis (Syracuse)
*Chasing Sokaris (Massena, NY)
--http://
*Bubba Crumrine (Ithaca Underground, Mouth to Mouth to Mouth, Brian!, Hiroshima Vacation)
--http://localshakes.org/
https://www.facebook.com/events/1509317992616715/
-------------------------
Sunday, August 3rd
Rochester, NY @ Bug Jar
DOORS @ 3 SHOW AT 4 OVER BY 730
SOUL CONTROL
LIKE WOLVES
FLIPSHIT
DIALYSIS
JAPANESE FURNACE
Thursday, June 26, 2014
REVIEWS FOR JUNE!
I go away for a little over a week and all these killer new records just make it known they exist in a very loud and awesome way. So I had already been listening to a few of them, and other ones I knew were coming to beat the doors down. But yeah, did Spring end and Summer begin with a storm of great releases. Those of the heavy, noisy, and weird variety making some waves for me. So read on music junkies and behold the lot this time around.
ANIMAL LOVER, “Guilt” LP
People around town kept telling me, ‘you’d love this band’,
or ‘this is a band that’s right up your alley’. Apparently, I have a type. Well, I finally saw them, and they were right, I do like
this band. They were, in fact, one
of the loudest three-piece bands I’d ever seen. But not in that sort of grating, ‘this is actually
punishing’ sort of way. They had
their sound so tight and dialed in, and then just cranked the shit out of it
that it straight just pierced my skull.
Not a bad first impression.
Their newest offering “Guilt” is on LP, but it’s only 6 songs so it’s
more of an EP than a full length, even though a few songs get kind of
lengthy. And that, I feel, is
Animal Lover’s only downside- they tend to jam out a bit too much for a band
that has very, very strong comparisons to Jesus Lizard, early Shellac, and Big
Black (except with a live drummer).
Their thick, rubbery bass bounces around while guitars skree and grate
over drunken yelped vocals… yeah,
I can get into that. Fuck, even
this album is really loud. These
dudes really know how to make a hell of a racket. (Learning Curve Records)
AS YOU WERE #3
Another edition of this semi-new and very awesome comics
anthology. Most of the
contributors this time are the same as the last issue, most of them being
pretty awesome, a few being total duds.
The theme of this issue is ‘big changes’. So each artist interpreted that as they saw fit, from comics
about punks becoming parents, to simply going from being into one type of music
to another, or one’s dwindling frequency of attending shows due to adult
responsibilities. Heck, Liz
Suburbia offers a literal interpretation by submitting a story about seeing a
band whose music is so gnarly that she literally changes into a giant wolf that
consumes the Earth. The cover is
by Lauren Denitzio and, honestly, I don’t get the adulation of her
artwork. This is basically a
drawing of a bland living room (the exception being the Mission Of Burma record
sitting next to a shelf) and her trademark use of newspaper clippings as a
background. Meh. Good thing the contents on the inside
make this worth picking up.
(Silver Sprocket)
AUSTERITY PROGRAM, THE, “ Beyond Calculation”
Two guys and a drum machine making a lot of noise. Heck, they’ve been at it for years and
are really damn good at it too.
The heirs to the throne of Big Black. The make no qualms about their drum machine sounding like a
drum machine and utilizing it as the machine that it is. It gives their music a slightly
industrial and robotic feel.
Meanwhile, they hoot and howl with grated guitars and nerd away in their
studio bunker, making sure every little sound is fine-tuned and labored over to
utmost perfection. Steve Albini
fan club charter members here. Of
all their output to date this is probably their best representation to date,
and self-released on their own label.
(Controlled Burn)
EYEHATEGOD, s/t
I’ll admit that I have never been an exceptionally die-hard
fan of Eyehategod. I booked them
twice- once was an awful experience where I saw their scummiest side upset my
naive little brain. The other was
a pleasant experience that had them at their sunniest, apparently coaxed by
beer, pizza, and meeting their desired guarantee with no issues. I only have one of their other records
and find most of it to be too fixated on the feedback and noise they love so
much. Yeah, I know. It’s their thing so why should I
complain about it? Anyway, some 14
years later they bounce back with a fucking vicious slab of sludge filth that
finds them at their absolute best.
I don’t know what switch flicked in my pea brain to find this particular
record so godamned good after having a half-hearted reaction to the rest of
their catalog. The recording is
stellar- it meshes the best parts of their scuzz-sludge noise assault with some
harsh clarity to make for complete outlaw, scumbag music. The band is totally focused and firing
on all cylinders, whether it’s the opening punk-infused drive of “Agitation! Propaganda!”, or the pained stop-start
riff-fest of “No One Told Me”. The
A-side has a bit more kick to it overall than the B-side, which works the
beaten-down, slow burn feedback downpour angle a bit more. But whatever, I’ll take it all. This is truly dangerous music for
desperate criminals who have lost all faith in humanity, created by lifers of
that exact same lot. Damaging
music. (Housecore)
GRIDLINK, “Longhenna”
I had planned on reviewing this last time around, but
forgot, which is stupid because this is a stupid good record. So I’m a huge fan of “The Inalienable
Dreamless” by Discordance Axis. It
basically sets an untouchable standard for just how weird, inventive, and fast
grindcore can be played. Their
vocalist, Jon Chang, has a very distinctive style that I really admired (as
well as a totally off-the-wall stage presence if you ever had the good fortune
to see one of their rare live appearances). That being said, he heads up this international grind unit
and I’m naturally going to be interested in anything he does musically. This is actually Gridlink’s second
(and, apparently, final) record, which contains the core of his previous
endeavor Haiyano Daisuki. Again,
super fast, very slickly produced, and full of wild guitar leads. It’s like future music for ADHD-riddled
video game freaks, minus any electronic elements. Just the fastest music imaginable, minus any of the
sloppiness or scuzz that accompanies most grind bands. This is played by perfectionists. So I still like Discordance Axis better
but they’re different animals and this is, by no means, a bad turn. It’s a fitting end to a good
project. (Handshake Inc.)
HELMS ALEE/YOUNG WIDOWS split 12”
So these two bands team up once again on a longer
format? Well, not exactly. Ben from Helms Alee’s old band,
Harkonen, did a split 7” with Young Widows previous incarnation as Breather
Resist and the results for both sets current band produce similar results. For Young Widows they are definitely an
album band. When they do shorter
offerings (like 7”s or splits) I feel like they’re pulling from their pile of
rejected songs. It’s not to say
the three songs they have here are not good, they just don’t have the heft and same
thought-out execution of grand ideas (or as much pedal experimentation) they
present on their LPs. These songs
are a bit more straight ahead and rocking than other material they have. Helms Alee, though, knock it out of the
park. “Punchy Stabby” starts
things off with a twisting and knotty riff that carries through this
ripper. “PAN” is next, and offers
up the meandering and melodic side of the group, while closer, “Gas Giant”
continues the meandering until a massive riff explodes from the ether and
swallows the song whole ‘til it fades into oblivion. The HA side wins this one. A bit dismayed at the lack of packaging on this sucker. Just a neat cover drawing, and no
insert or info about the songs, recordings, lyrics, or otherwise. (Sargent House)
HINDSIGHT, “Draining Satellites” EP
If I could call up the meme of the smiling dude with
cornrows and add my own text, “I heard you like hardcore, so I put some
hardcore in your hardcore to make it more hardcore” I’d place that here instead
of an actual review. It would get
the point across. These are some
Pittsburgh dudes who are clearly having a good time revisiting their favorite
memories of Trial and other mid-to-late 90’s hardcore styles. I mean, just get a load of their name
and their record title! I lived
through this stuff man, I know my 90’s hardcore worship when I hear it. If this doesn’t turn your small t-shirt
into an XL ringer than you’re not listening. Regardless, they do a decent job of it, throwing down seven
tracks of multiple breakdowns, lots of chugging rocking, and sing-alongs. You will mosh. You will (most likely) bleach your hair
as well after hearing this. (Hindsight)
PUP, s/t
Not since the 90’s have I been swayed to see a band or
purchase their record based upon a music video as an introduction to their
music. Pup are my 120 minutes (or
Headbangers Ball) moment of 2014.
Of course, both videos they have made (which are insane, by the way,
look them up) are for two of the best songs on this LP. Opener “Guilt Trip” rides a swinging
beat with a wacky guitar lick looping over it and wild sing-along chants, while
the next song, “Reservoir” takes a ripping punk rocker and inserts even more
song-along madness to the mix.
From there it gets to be fairly consistent with songs like “Dark Days”,
“Lionheart”, “Back Against the Wall” and “Mabu” all having a similar feel-
upbeat punk, catchy riffs and licks, and sung/yelled melodic vocals and gang
vocals. Nothing wrong with any of
that, but I like the songs where they’re going against the grain and doing
something different, like “Guilt Trip” and the painfully beautiful and
post-hardcore leaning “Cul-De-Sac” to separate them from the pack. Nevertheless, Pup are a really fun band
that take some of the more fun moments of Weezer and toss them into a blender
with bands like Flatliners and Fucked Up.
(SideOneDummy)
YOUNG WIDOWS, “Easy Pain”
The A-side of Young Widows fourth LP may be some of the best
stuff they’ve ever done. Each of
the first four songs is a separate, awesome entity. “Godman” opens things up with a huge, crushing collapse of
haywire intent moving at sloth speed.
“Cool Night” demonstrates how the band can take chaos and present it in
a pretty and smooth way before Evan Patterson comes in with that closing epic
guitar ascension while crooning “ease the pain” over and over. “Kerosene Girl” picks up the pace and
burns the house down before they’re even halfway through the record. The first closes out with “Doomed
Moon”, quite possibly one of my favorite YW songs ever. It opens with a looped whisper of
guitar, adding up until it’s a simple little whistle. And then it just gets completely smashed by Nick Thineman’s
pulverizing bass, turning the whole thing into a repetitive lumbering beast
while Evan’s guitar abuse wails all around it with calculated skronks of noise
tear through the mess (and that constant little background loop). It’s quite incredible. Not to say the B-side is a dud. “Bird Feeder” might be one of their
most sleazy-sounding songs they have written. “Gift Of Failure” and “King Sol” are top notch additions to
the band’s catalog, but add in a consistent way, and not necessarily as the
pick of the litter. All in all and
great record that successfully combines the inventiveness and wild nature of
“Old Wounds” with the moody and reserved weight of “In and Out Of Youth and
Lightness” (Temporary Residence)
Tuesday, June 10, 2014
OFF TO SEATTLE
Going on vacation for a little over a week. The Northwest calls for me once more. Hoping to see old pals, new sights, and lots of Mighty-O Donuts. Seattle/Portland area give me some good stuff.
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