Tag: interview
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SXSW 2015: Lenka x Vinyl Mag
Despite what you think you know about SXSW, we’re guessing Lenka could teach you a thing or two. She has been a fixture of the festival for years and has a special connection with Austin that was written in the stars. That, plus her new single “Blue Skies” off her upcoming album, The Bright Side, has us anticipating just how crazy awesome her showcase this year will probably be.
VM: How many shows will you be playing at South by, and which ones are they?
Lenka Kripac: I’m playing two shows. The Aussie BBQ and ASCAP Presents, both on March 20.
VM: What is the general theme of your new single, “Blue Skies?”
LK: Optimism that things will be better. And um, the weather?
VM: Can we expect the same sentiments to be repeated in your upcoming album, The Bright Side?
LK: Yes, it’s a super optimistic album. I feel like that’s my biggest strength as a songwriter and communicator. Imparting a feeling of hope and happiness in our lives.
VM: You’ve had such an interesting and colorful career. What are some of the biggest changes you’ve experienced creatively as an artist between now and when you were in Decoder Ring?
LK: Not being in a band, means always having to form a band. I’ve employed so so many awesome musicians over the years. It’s a rotating roster, depending on people’s other projects and availability. It can be quite stressful making it all work. But creatively, of course, I’m free to explore whatever I feel, so that’s liberating.
VM: Who are you most excited to see play this year at South by?
LK: Marina and The Diamonds! I’ve always been a fan but never seen her live. Hope I can get to a show!
VM: You’ve said in previous interviews an astrologer once told you that Austin was the perfect city for you to live in. What attributes do you think you share with the city that people are trying so hard to “keep weird?”
LK: Well, I do like to surround myself with wonderful weirdos. I guess there’s something in my stars! Freedom to be weird is very important to me.
VM: Are you a barbeque joint or a food truck kind of gal?
LK: Both, either – I’m gonna eat it all. But I need a lot of veggies on the side, too, please!
VM: In your opinion, what are the biggest differences between making music in the U.S. and Australia?
LK: It’s very S L O W in Aus, I find. People are too wrapped up in living the good life maybe. My experience in the U.S., though sometimes still complicated, has been much faster. People are always ready and excited to work.
VM: The Bright Side is set to release in June. Will you be releasing any more singles before then?
LK: Yes, I hope so! Not sure which song though…
VM: Will you be playing any other songs from your new album during SXSW?
LK: Yep, a few more for sure!
SXSW 2015: The Knocks x Vinyl Mag
From New York City, The Knocks started in their own apartment in a homemade studio. Eventually they made it to Chinatown, and now they’re taking over. These two are dedicated and continually growing and improving. Ben “DJ B-Roc” Ruttner and James “JPatt” Patterson came together in 2009, making their own hip-hop beats as roommates. Now, their love of disco, funk, and hip-hop have come together to land their music in the Will Smith box office hit, Focus. Vinyl Mag got a chance to interview the two friends about their unique sound, their origins, and their future. We look forward to catching them at SXSW, where they will be DJ-ing several showcases. Their music is catchy, feel-good, and dance-worthy – definitely two guys you should be listening to.
Vinyl Mag: Your single “Comfortable” was in the new Will Smith movie, Focus. Did you see the movie?
Ben Ruttner: No, I haven’t seen it. I’ve been getting a lot of texts from my friends when they’re in the movie theater.
VM: That’s exciting! How did you find out about it?
BR: Yeah, it’s one of those things where you hear about, and you kind of forget that it actually happened, which is cool. It’s number one at the box office right now, which is cool.
VM: That’s awesome! Do you plan on seeing it?
BR: I’m going to wait for On Demand.
VM: Your music is an interesting combination of hip-hop and contemporary classic. How do you find a balance between the two genres?
BR: I think it just happens naturally; we just pull from all of our influences. When we first started, we made a lot of “poppy” stuff with a more hard-hitting, almost urban influence. Then, we started to stray away from it towards more of this straight dance stuff. Since then, our new album is definitely going back to that original sound of ours, more influenced by early Gorillaz, Fatboy Slim, kind of 90’s pop but more credible trip “poppy” bass stuff, but it all has that kind of funk, disco influence to it, which is the thing that brings it all together.
VM: I can definitely hear that in your music. You guys started in New York?
BR: Yeah, we met in New York. I was born in Vermont; James was born here in New York. We met here, and we were roommates first, and we used to make hip hop beats together, and then we started making more and more music.
VM: How has your life in New York influenced your music?
James Patterson: We’re both DJ’s, so we like to test music out on different kinds of crowds, and if it doesn’t work, there’s a bunch of different scenes. We really have to be on our toes when we get to a gig and want to play different kinds of music – that way we can see what works, and when we get back into the studio we can incorporate different techniques.
VM: Do you think that your different backgrounds influence the music at all?
JP: Definitely. Sometimes, we listen to more rock or more funk and gospel, but we both listen to hip-hop. We take that into consideration when we’re making music.
VM: Do you think your music has evolved since your start in 2009? How so?
JP: Definitely; it’s just better in every way. Our equipment is better, and the sound is better; we’re going through a lot of different influences, just being here [in New York]. We’re trying to be relevant and stay relevant while keeping our own sound.
VM: When you first started, did you do a lot of your own recording, or did you have your own studio?
JP: We had a studio in our bedroom, and then we got a studio in Chinatown that we built. We’ve always had our own space.
VM: Is there a particular sound that you guys are going for in your latest tracks and for the future?
BR: We really like to use classic influences and have stuff that sounds like it could be retro and give it a future element. We call it “future retro” – no, “future classic,” “retro futurism” – but that’s basically the whole vibe. We try to keep with a feel-good sound; we have a couple of somber songs, but it’s very much so upbeat, feel-good music. We try to keep it organic and try to have a cool edge to it but keep it super accessible. We don’t think of ourselves as a super-indie band; we definitely make pop music. We’re trying to bring back that whole vibe, when Moby dominated the airwaves, Fatboy Slim, and Gorillaz – that really cool pop music that has something different you can put your finger on.
VM: A lot of artists remix your songs. What is that process like?
BR: We have so many friends who are producers and DJ’s that we’ll just reach out with a trade – we’ll remix their song, and they’ll remix ours. If it’s a bigger artist, they have to go through the label, and we’ll get them paid and do it. The ones that come out the best I think are the ones we get for free from friends, because they care a little bit more than trying to get some money.
VM: You guys will be making your way to Austin, Texas for South by Southwest this year? What are you most excited about?
BR: We’re headlining the Neon Gold showcase on the last night, which is going to be fun, because it’s a really great venue, Empire Garage. We’re playing with some friends, Alex Winston and Marina Diamond [Marina and the Diamonds], so it’ll be like a family affair because we’ve been friends for years.
VM: Do you think you’ll have to explore at all, or will you be hitting the road?
BR: Oh yeah – we’re there for the whole week, because we’re playing a bunch of stuff for interactive, and then we’re basically stuck there for the whole week. We’ll definitely be walking around, and we go every year.
VM: Who are you looking forward to seeing at SXSW?
BR: I don’t know; I’ve kind of been out of the loop. I like to go see artists I’ve never heard of before; I feel like that’s what it’s all about. Some people treat it like Coachella, where you go see these huge artists, but it’s such a shit show trying to get into all these parties. You have to be on the list, and you’re there with all of your friends, and you can’t get in. I like to go to the weird, off-the-beaten-path shows and see some band I’ve never heard of.
VM: What shows are you playing this year at SXSW?
BR: We’re actually just doing the Neon Gold showcase and the Atlantic showcase; those are our live shows. Then we have a couple DJ sets; I think we’re DJ’ing a Nylon party and the Crazy Heart party.
VM: Are you a taco truck or a barbecue joint person?
BR: Taco truck is me.
JP: I’d probably go for taco truck too; BBQ is pretty heavy.
VM: You guys don’t have a lot of BBQ up north, do you?
JP: No, we have lots of taco trucks.
VM: Well maybe you should try some BBQ in Texas – I hear it’s pretty good.
JP: Definitely.
UPDATE 3.10.15 11:00 a.m. –
The Knocks announce the release of their forthcoming So Classic EP on April 7 via Big Beat/Neon Gold. Check out their new video for “Dancing With Myself” below!
Monsoon x Vinyl Video

We are all ABOUT some Monsoon over here. One interview in five months is just not enough, so we came back for more.
I met up with Sienna Chandler (vocals, guitar), Scott Andrews (bass, vocals), and Joey Kegel (percussion) backstage before their album release show at the Georgia Theatre (the only venue they hadn’t yet played in Athens) to talk about their upcoming shows, their favorite songs to play live, and – most importantly – their awesome debut, Ride A’ Rolla (stream below)!
Sam Burchfield x Vinyl Mag
Not to be overly dramatic, but music kind of chose me. I couldn’t not do it. I kept doing it, and I sucked really bad, but I kept getting better…
Sitting across from Sam Burchfield – along with his bandmate, Zach Wells, and manager, Andy Kahn – in Ted’s Most Best, it occurs to me that I’m looking at an artist who is undoubtedly going to make it big (and that’s not just because Ted’s bacon and egg pizza makes everything perfect).
Sam Burchfield is a “full soul funk” (see below interview) artist based out of Atlanta, Georgia. After hearing the buzz about him around town and grabbing hold of some of his tunes, I knew there was something unique here that needed to explored, so I reached out for an interview.
Because Burchfield ‘s music is soulful. That is the perfect word for it. It doesn’t just describe his genre – it describes the heart of the artist himself. He is unwavering in his passion for music, yes, but he is also strategic and intentional about his path, insisting on doing things his way – even if that means it’s not necessarily the easy way.
Check out our interview below, where we talk about his time on American Idol and why he ultimately decided it wasn’t for him, as well as his plans for the future and his songwriting process.
Also be sure to catch Burchfield at The Fox Theatre opening for St. Paul & the Broken Bones this Saturday, December 27 in Atlanta!
Vinyl Mag: You went to UGA; what did you study?
Sam Burchfield: I went to Grady College and studied Public Relations. I graduated last fall, so it’s cool coming back to Athens. I have since then moved to Atlanta. I have a lot of good friends that do UGA HEROs, and it’s great to come back and partner with them.
VM: How did living in Athens affect your music?
SB: The reason I came to Athens was because of the music – the Music Business program to be exact. Honestly, not to hate on my major, but I didn’t really like PR. The Music Business program here was all that I was interested in, all that I wanted to do. David Barbe [Director and Lecturer for the Music Business Certificate Program] kind of just lit a fire under me to go after it. I think at the end of my sophomore year I realized, “I’m going to graduate, and I’m going to do music. What does that look like? What do I need to be doing now to get ready for that, to get ready for recording?”
Athens cultivated everything I was doing; it gave me a pretty well-sized city to develop a sound and a show…coming to Athens was just this huge cultural experience of all of these incredible bands that have come out of here, and a lot of people that are full time musicians. It’s something that I’ve never been exposed to really. Athens has a huge part in my career and definitely was where it started.
VM: Do you think studying PR has helped with promotion, because people sometimes do that to learn how to promote themselves?
SB: Yeah, I think that was my justification of doing it. I came in Pre-Business, because it was tied to the Music Business program, and that was just too corporate and sterile for me and my creative side. With PR, there’s a little more creativity to that, like writing and graphic design. I think subconsciously, it helps. I don’t think about it, but yes – I think it was a useful thing. I wouldn’t say to someone who is in music to put all of your eggs in the basket of studying PR. There’s a lot of other things that could be useful.
VM: I do feel like it does change the way you think about things even if you don’t realize it, because I took a lot of PR classes, and I [worked in PR] for awhile. It helped me promote what I’m doing.
SB: I think one of the best things that I got from it was professionalism. I think a lot of musicians and people in music don’t have that, and I’m not aware of it at all…I think a lot of PR seemed common sense to me…that is a good point though; it’s definitely a useful thing, and it paired well with Music Business.
VM: Do you do all of the writing?
SB: Zach [Wells] recently, has started [writing]. I have done all of my writing. In August, Zach moved to Atlanta. I convinced him finally. I had been working on it for a little while, and he graduated in the spring, so I convinced him to move to Atlanta to do music full time as a project. He plays when we do the full band shows, and pretty much everything since August we’ve done as a duo at least. We started co-writing finally, and I’m super picky about co-writing, because I’m so possessive of songs that I’m a part of, but Zach is like this wall of criticism.
Zach Wells: I don’t really respond with “yes” or “no.” The ideas just bounce back until Sam makes it better.
SB: It’s like I’m running constantly into a wall, and eventually the wall turns into a comfy bed, and I’m like, “Okay, this is good.” Zach is like, “Eh, this sucks. That sucks. That sucks. That’s okay.” When he says, “That’s okay,” that’s when I feel good. We’ve actually co-written, more recently, some pretty active songs, and some of them are just me refining lyrics with him. I know one, we totally wrote together on a car trip. It’s been cool, but for the most part it’s been me writing. Also on the EP was me writing.
VM: What’s your process?
SB: I typically start off of a vibe. I have a guitar; I’ll be somewhere mentally, and just play something until I settle on something I like. I’ll just be vibing on a song or a musical idea, which most of the time is something on the guitar, but sometimes if I’m driving I’ll come up with melodies, and I’ll base it off of that. It starts off with just gibberish. Going off of the sound, the words starts to settle.
VM: So, it’s music first?
SB: Yeah! I don’t think I ever just sit down and write lyrics first, but the lyrics become a huge part once I’ve got the music. Then I really hone in on it. Also, there will be times when it just all comes out.
Not to get too real, but from both ends of the spectrum, one time I wrote this love song. All of a sudden, I had this idea and a few words, and then “boom” in an hour or less it was totally done, and I was happy with it. On the other end, I got broken up with recently. Same thing; I was driving and wrestling with this idea, and I got back to the apartment and had to get it out. I had been working on part of it, and it kind of clicked and broke through the wall, and it was all there. I think with writing, it’s total freedom, trying not to have a routine, because then it turns into not a creative process.
VM: What did you grow up listening to?
SB: I was the kid that listened to pretty much whatever my parents listened to, which I guess most kids were at the beginning. My dad was country radio and classic rock radio all the time. He had a kick of just Johnny Cash for a while, too. My mom was a 70’s funk disco child. I remember she would have these stair-stepping workout days in the basement, and I was home from preschool, and I would be down there, and she would swing me around, and she’d be listening to Earth, Wind & Fire, Michael Jackson, the Bee Gees. As far as the funk and the soul, that’s really come back for me. I listen to a lot of that stuff now, like Stevie Wonder and a lot of Motown artists, but then there’s this southern-folk side from my dad and everything he listened to. Those are the two juxtapositions of where the music I’m playing now is. There’s some folk and southern and this soul/funk bridging together.
I went through a singer/songwriter acoustic guy phase in high school, like Damien Rice and Jack Johnson and Ray LaMontagne.
Recently, I’ve been getting into a lot of new soul artists, like Allen Stone and Emily King. Zach and I have been falling in love with Emily King. Another cool thing, doing wedding bands, I’m learning new songs every week, like new jazz standards for cocktail hours and new funk Motown, or just pop, to keep that fresh. I think I’m pretty well rounded with the stuff I listen to, and I do like all of it.
It’s tricky to write a lot of different styles and then try to figure out how you turn that into what your sound is. I think we’ve really started to lock it in, playing together, which is really fun, and finding the people that can do that; finding people that can go from a shuffle beat to a groove and four on the floor.
VM: In three words, how would you describe your music to someone who hasn’t heard you before?
SB: Soulful folk.
VM: Three words or less.
SB: [Laughs] We like to separate the words “soul” and “full”…full soul folk.
VM: Tell me about being on American Idol.
SB: Ah, the cat’s out of the bag. I thought you would’ve lead with that one. Yes, I tried out for American Idol last summer. I’ll try to do the abbreviated version of this. I did it on a whim, because people wanted me to check it out. It was really fun, I did it, and I got through, and I kept getting through the rounds and realized, “Oh wow, this is a thing now.” I finally found myself in front of the judges, because it takes many times before what you see on TV actually happens. So, I got the ticket to Hollywood; it was this crazy, crazy time while I was in my last semester of college…
I turned down American Idol for many reasons, one being they wouldn’t let me put out my EP until a year after American Idol. I was just finishing up around that time, because I released it in February. So I thought, “That’s really uncool. I don’t want to do that.” So, I turned them down…this whole three-month span, I had to think about why I was doing music and what was important to me. It was tough. I had my council of wise people, talking to them about it. I talked to David Barbe a lot about it. I figured out what’s important is the organic nature of it, the personal connections of playing for somebody and having them really affected by what you’re doing, or having them connected to what you’re doing. Also, the behind the scenes connection of playing with people who are your friends and the relationships that music is about.
That was another thing – everybody that I played with, and that I wanted to play with, and all of my friends, family – everyone was here on the east coast, Atlanta, and South Carolina. It was this difficult realization, but it’s also really given me so much direction and grounding now. Now, we’re not signed to some label, we’re not doing any crazy things compared to [what we could have done], but we’re doing it our way.
I found Andy [Kahn] around the time this was going on, and we really connected. He wanted to be a part of this and help out, so he’s been managing. Zach decided to move to Atlanta, and these things are falling into place that are slow but right, and it feels great. No regrets about all that stuff.
I’m not trying to be like, “I nobly did this.” I really had no idea, and I was lucky to have people in my life that did have an idea. Honestly, it kind of wasn’t up to me. I feel like God lead me down this path.
VM: Tell me about your show [at Georgia Theatre in Athens] and UGA HEROs.
SB: UGA HEROs is an organization that is basically trying to improve the quality of life and help treat HIV/AIDS children in Georgia, which there are around 12,000 I think is the statistic for that. That’s really crazy, because you think of it as a third-world thing, and it’s important to help that, too, but this is immediate; these are our neighbors. They’re awesome, and if that’s not enough to get people to come out…it’s going to be a fun show…I’m excited to be a part of it and just to always play the Georgia Theatre. It’s my favorite place I’ve played; it’s a really special venue.
VM: It’s a great venue. What’s next for you after this?
SB: We’re excited. Like I was saying earlier, we’ve just locked in this full band group. Not everyone is going to be there tonight at the theater just because some guys couldn’t make it. We’ve got the people and the friends that are part of this full band thing, so we’re trying to figure out what to define that as. I think we’re all open to anything, but we’re going to move forward with that group of people, making a full-length record in 2015. There are no details on that. We’re talking to producers right now, and we’re developing a lot of new songs, which we’re super-pumped about. We’re playing a couple new songs tonight. We’ll be touring in the spring, just doing it the old-fashioned way, slowly but surely.
VM: How did you develop your voice? It’s a pretty unique singing style.
Thank you! I discovered it through a lot of fumbling around in the dark. The first way I started singing was just to sing like whatever I was listening to, whether it was the BeeGees, Jack Johnson, or Johnny Cash. Eventually, I realized what music I sucked at singing, and my voice settled into where it was comfortable. It’s an ongoing journey of course, and I’m really trying to continue to learn my voice and develop my craft of singing. There is always room to improve, which has kind of been my approach to singing.
VM: Do you have any other creative outlets besides music?
I never get to, but I like to work with my hands building things, too…Both of my grandparents were incredible carpenters. For me, LEGOs was my childhood passion until I picked up a guitar. Carpentry is a creative outlet I have yet to develop, but I could see my self whittling on a front porch and being really happy down the road. For now, music pretty much takes up all of the creative space in my life, which is the perfectly fine by me.
Melvins x Vinyl Mag
Pinkus recorded the vast majority of that song while he was stoned on LSD. Listen to it with that in mind, and it will all make sense.
The Melvins have been very busy in 2014 making three volumes of This Machine Kills Artists and two full-length albums. All the while, they’ve have gathered a large following over the years with their indefinable style. It is part punk, a little grunge, a handful of metal, but mostly a genre all its own, Melvin. Since the 80’s, the Melvins have joined forces with various artists. For their latest album, Hold It In, Paul Leary and Jeff Pinkus of the Butthole Surfers join the Melvins pot. Vinyl Mag talked with King Buzzo himself, about the collabs, music style, and hairstyle.
Vinyl Mag: Since the 80’s, how do you think the hard rock/grunge genre has changed?
Buzz Osborne: Oh God, Jesus, and Holy Mother of Pearl, I have no idea. Have things changed at all? I suppose they have, but it’s hard to see it really. I’ve hated everything since I was 15. That hasn’t changed.
VM: How have (the) Melvins’ sound changed – and stayed the same – over the years to adapt to your modern listeners?
BO: I’ve never in my life had any idea what young people want. I’ve hated children since I was a child. I’ve fortunately never concerned myself with what young people like or want. This is a good thing.
VM: Can you tell us about the process of writing and producing Hold It In?
BO: Well, lets see… Pinkus, Paul, and I each wrote a batch of songs over the course of about a year. We then gathered ourselves into studios in Austin and Los Angeles and hammered out the basics. Once we had those basics the way we wanted them, we began doing the overdubs, which took a lot of emailing and name calling. Then came mixing and mastering. The rest was easy!
VM: What is the concept of the album?
BO: There’s no concept.
VM: How has Butthole Surfers’ JD and Paul’s style contributed to your new album, Hold It In? How has the collaboration meshed with the typical Melvins sound?
BO: Both Paul and Pinkus are great players and good songwriters, so it was nice to be able to have them be involved. I let them do whatever they wanted.
VM: You seem to do quite a few collaborations; how does a collab come together, specifically this one with the Butthole Surfers?
BO: Pinkus was in Los Angeles, so Dale and I decided to jam a bit with him. One thing led to another, and a year and a half later, we have a record! We’re not afraid of such things. When you have no fear, it’s difficult to mess things up.
VM: Do you have anyone else you’d love to collaborate with?
BO: Yes indeed, but no one who’s willing to do something of that nature with us.
VM: “You Can Make Me Wait” has a different sound than the rest of the tracks on the album, kind of spacey. Can you explain the experimental addition?
BO: Spacey? I wouldn’t have thought spacey, but okay. It has a bit of a commercial vibe to it, but it’s still pretty weird.
VM: “Barcelonian Horseshoe Pit” also has that experimental sound. What was the process for making this particular track?
BO: Pinkus recorded the vast majority of that song while he was stoned on LSD. Listen to it with that in mind, and it will all make sense.
VM: Obviously, you’re very experienced in the music world. There are so many people trying to create bands, keep bands afloat, and get to the next level. What is one piece of advice you wish you had known going into your music career?
BO: Be as weird as is possible.
VM: How has the industry changed since you started?
BO: It’s a lot harder to sell records, but other than that, not much has changed. There’s a lot of argument now about how great tape sounds compared to digital. Listen to our first 7 inch. It sounds like shit. Recording it to tape didn’t help one bit.
VM: What is your favorite part of making music?
BO: 50-50 split between recording and playing live.
VM: Do you listen to your own music recreationally?
BO: Not really, it’s not fun for me.
VM: You and Jared Warren seem to share the same taste in hair style – is there some competition going on? What’s your best hair care advice?
BO: Shave your head.
AthFest 2014: Stokeswood x Vinyl Mag
Imagine a group like Young The Giant on 80’s dance steroids. That’s kind of what comes to mind when I try to describe the incredible and unique sound of five-piece Atlanta rock group Stokeswood.
I had the opportunity to sit down with the guys before their set this weekend at AthFest, and let me tell you – they’re awesome. Sometimes speaking with bands makes you realize that the people you thought were cool aren’t actually that cool.
But man, these guys are cool. After a long buffalo wing and World Cup filled discussion, we got down to business discussing their newest single, their killer logo, and of course, Smashmouth.
VM: So, how did you guys meet?
Jon Joiner: A couple of us went to school together, you know, college years.
Justin Mullinix: Adam, Jon, and Mark went to college together, and technically Mike, too. So I’m the only one. I did go to elementary school with Adam, though.
VM: So you guys have a new single out – “Our Streets” – and a video. Tell me about the song.
Mike Roman: We were just writing songs one night. We’d just get together and say, ‘cool, we’re going to write songs on Wednesdays.’ We’d just clown out chords, hum along, and have our Pro Tools rig open. The song actually came together pretty naturally in one night.
VM: That must be super convenient when something just comes together like that.
MR: Yeah, the best songs always do.
Mark Godwin: They don’t always happen that way.
VM: So is this single leading up to a new Stokeswood album, perhaps?
MR: It is. But no official, ‘hey, we’re putting out an album’ or anything. We’re just writing and recording.
MG: We have enough songs for a new EP definitely, but we’re still working and writing. We also had the opportunity to go film the music video [for “Our Streets”] out in LA with Eli Berg, which was great timing.
MR: This single was just ready, and we hadn’t put anything out in a long time. We actually did the whole song as a ruse to get us to California.
VM: Will the new album sound a lot like the old one, or are you all moving in a new direction?
MR: I mean, how much do you miss Smashmouth?
VM: I mean, I miss Smashmouth everyday.
MR: More like Sugar Ray and Smashmouth.
MG: It’s definitely like the next evolution of the last album. It’s going to have the same soundscape that the new single does.
JJ: The first album was more rock-y, but it had some leanings into dance music, and we’re now even more on the dance side.
MR: We’re all 80’s kids, so I feel like it’s always going to have that 80’s retro vibe.
VM: Random technical question, but where did your logo come from? Because it’s awesome.
MG: We did that on a night we got together and decided to come up with a logo.
Adam Patterson: Show her your tattoos.
MG: On the first album, we had this song called “The Extraordinary Mr. Hit,” and this is back when Justin wasn’t in the band, and the song was written by Adam before we went into the studio. Justin had produced some hip hop tracks and was showing us some production techniques, and the sound wave image ended up resembling this guy which I tattooed on my forearm.
AP: The images are vocals, so it’s technically our sound waves.
MG: It wasn’t completely planned, but it turned out nicely and worked well.
MR: [Stoner voice] We all got together and-
MG: [Sarcastically] Oh yeah, we were all on meth!
VM: Oh, great! [Laughs] A lot of artists outsource that kind of thing, so it’s cool that it’s something you all came up with organically!
MR: Sean Kaminsky, he actually goes to UGA [University of Georgia], came up with the final draft of the one we use now though.
VM: So you all played Party in the Park, and now you’re playing AthFest. What’s your favorite part about playing festivals?
MG: I think the fans. Festivals are unique, because people save up money, they plan around it, and they’re there for one reason, and that’s to see live music. That’s the best part for me anyway, because you really get a group of people who are there for the same reason as you.
AP: Yeah, the campout festivals versus the one-day festivals are really awesome, because people are there to really let loose for two to three days in a row. We were lucky enough to play Aura Fest the last couple years in North Florida; we played the inaugural CounterPoint Festival, and the campout vibe is awesome.
VM: So this is a question I love to ask everyone, but if you could plan your ideal musical fest with any artists, dead or alive, who would play?
MG: Smashmouth and Sugar Ray!
MR: We were playing a show with Papadosio, and our third show with them, there was a guy who was very clearly on substances, and he wanted to bring a festival to Brazil, and he wanted it to be ‘avant garde and retarded,’ and he was going to call it ‘Avantarded.’ He was onto something, I think. He wanted us, Paul McCartney, Daft Punk, Papadosio, and U2, and I’m just going to go with him, because I think he is a visionary. Avantarded 2020, we’ll see you in Brazil.
MG: I think on my festy of the dead people I’d say Mozart, Whitest Boy Alive, Talking Heads in their heyday.
MR: Bernie Worrell.
MG: Just dueling pianos Mozart vs. Bernie.
JJ: Talk about Avantarded…
MR: Avantarded! Oh, Kilo Ali!
All: Kilo Ali!
MG: Kilo Ali, Mozart, and the Talking Heads.
JM: And DJ Khaled.
[Whole table laughs for about 10 minutes talking about Stokeswood’s hypothetical new side project, MethMouth]VM: To wrap up, what’s in store for you guys in the future? Obviously, you’re working on an album.
MR: We want to expand our touring to get over to the west coast. But at least for now is making sure we can just put together the best album we can.
VM: What’s the number one west coast city you guys want to play?
MR: LA.
MG: Portland.
AP: Oh, Portland [laughs].
JM: Seattle!
MG: All of them – ‘City of the West Coast.’
Stokeswood on Tour!
Jul 06 PARK TAVERN w/ Radio Birds Atlanta, GA
Jul 17 River Jam Concert Series Charlotte, NC
Jul 18 New Mountain Theatre Asheville, NC
Jul 19 Play it Forward Music Festival Atlanta, GA
Jan 24 The Rock Boat XV w/ Michael Franti &… Cozumel, Mexico
Jan 25 The Rock Boat XV w/ Barenaked Ladies Cozumel, Mexico
Jan 26 The Rock Boat XV w/ Scars On 45 Cozumel, Mexico
Jan 27 The Rock Boat XV w/ Sister Hazel Cozumel, Mexico
Jan 28 The Rock Boat XV w/ The Mowgli’s Cozumel, Mexico
Athfest 2014: Powerkompany x Vinyl Mag
I got the chance to talk to Athens’ own Powerkompany during Saturday night’s portion of Athfest. Guitarist/vocalist Marie Davon (Venice is Sinking) and guitarist/violinist Andrew Heaton (Packway Handle Band) sat down with me after their show at the World Famous to talk about the bands’ dynamic, where they’d like to see Powerkompany going, and their love for Athens.
Vinyl Mag: First off, I was trying to get into the World Famous in time to catch your set, and it was one in, one out. You had a packed house during Athfest!
Marie Davon: Oh, really?! It was so, so amazing in there. Really good energy.
VM: And the crowd definitely felt the same way! I was talking to the people around me, and they all said they had seen you before and were raving about your voice, Marie. They had all seen you play in Athens and Atlanta a few times before. So what’s it like playing during Athfest versus your own shows?
MD: It’s always different during Athfest. It feels like there’s more love. It feels like a family reunion. Every year, you get to see all of your friends, because usually they’re all touring or just being reclusive. That’s like us – very reclusive. We’re always either on tour or at our house. Not to mention there are different people out, too – people that wouldn’t usually be out to see a show.
VM: I noticed you had a keyboardist. In the past it has just been the two of you performing. Are you guys trying to expand and create a different stage presence?
MD: I’m really into musicals and plays and stuff, and I have had the luxury over the past couple months to have the time to dedicate to live performances, so tonight was kind of a rehearsal for continuing on and doing more.
VM: I was also really impressed with your stage set up with the balloons and backdrop. They were all very beautiful and ethereal and tied into the beautiful vocals and violin the both of you were playing. Who has the creative direction in the band?
MD: I guess I am technically the creative director, the main song-writer. Andrew is my editor, producer. Because of the lack of band members right now, we have to somehow figure out a way to play with a drummer who doesn’t exist. So we both really get to experiment and play around. We’re actually scientists. We’re doing music because it is our passion now; it’s almost like a science. The old-fashioned kind of experimentation, making electricity and making things pop.
Andrew Heaton: What ends up happening is she writes the songs and then she brings it to me, and…I put it altogether and add the backing tracks. She’s at the point. She’s at the front. She writes the songs, brings it to me. I will produce things that I think will work well both for the live set and when we’re recording. Sometimes those are similar, sometimes those are different, and then it will bounce back to her, and she decides how it will be expressed on stage visually.
VM: It’s refreshing seeing something different than the typical band set up. Between the two of you and Jillian, the keyboardist, it kept my attention more than some of the other talent I have seen during Athfest, where a lot of the five-piece bands all sound pretty similar. You guys have a comfortable stage presence. Where are you trying to take the band from here? Are you trying to get out of playing in Athens and Atlanta?
MD: In the past two years, we have been developing our sound, we have been doing small weekend tours, or we would take a week up to New York and back, but it’s been mostly regional shows. Ideally, it would be amazing to go on tour with someone like, in our wildest dreams, Kishi Bashi or Lykke Li or Grimes. People we look up to but we also feel like we have a comparable, yet different sound. We have such an odd, eclectic sound, and it’s very hard for us to find people to tour with. With Kishi Bashi and him living in town, it’s like a dream come true.
I played on of Montreal’s last album, so it’s cool being in Athens, because we do run into people who are national acts, and that is our goal. It’s a great place to live. As an artist, it’s perfect, because you can go on tour and come home and not get bombarded with daily life. You can lock yourself in your room in your house and then work. And then go out.
AH: Seriously. There’s like 10 million people in New York City, right? And we all know of some bands that come out of New York and get really big, but not really the proportion it should be. We’ve got 120 thousand people in Athens, and the number of bands…there’s so many!
MD: Sometimes, we’ll play on a random night in Athens, and there won’t be very many people there, and that’s fine because we get to use it as a practice. That’s another plus in Athens – you get to break your new material to not very many people.
Be sure to catch Powerkompany on their current tour! Really. You want to.
Dates:
Tue, 08 Jul Athens, GA Georgia Theatre
Thu, 10 Jul Greenville, SC WPBR Radio Room
Fri, 11 Jul Columbia, SC Conundrum Music Hall
Sat, 12 Jul Atlanta, GA Mammal Gallery
Wed, 30 Jul Athens, GA Flicker Theatre and Bar
Tue, 30 Sep Atlanta, GA WREK Radio: Live @ WREK
Athfest 2014: Wieuca x Vinyl Mag
Four piece “characteristically noisy” (their words, not mine) southern rock group, Wieuca, was founded in 2011 by frontman and guitarist Will Ingram and drummer Robert Smith. Three years, two new members and one full length album later, Wieuca takes the main stage at AthFest and kills it.
The chemistry onstage is incredible, and the group works a hot and sweaty 1 p.m. crowd with ease. The four shred through their performance and earn themselves a place in my ranks as one of the best groups in Athens to see live. These guys come from all around Atlanta and are somewhat new to the Athens area, so I think I speak for everyone when I say we’re glad they’re here.
We grabbed an interview with the boys before their set and asked them a little about how it feels to be performing on the main stage this year, and what plans Wieuca has for the future.
VM: I read that you guys describe yourselves as having a “characteristically noisy approach to the southern sound.” With such a unique sound, what kind of artists influence you as a group??
Will: When we started playing together, we were heavily influenced by 90’s college rock and midwestern alt-country, but we’ve started incorporating a little bit of everything. It’s fun to combine different styles in an unexpected way.
Robert: I think it’s always hard to pinpoint exactly who or what is influencing us at any point in time. Consciously trying to emulate any particular artist isn’t something we really do. Our everyday lives, our relationships, are really our biggest influences. But if I had to name an artist, I’ve spent the past couple of months listening to a lot of Todd Rundgren. And War on Drugs. They’re pretty tight, too.
VM: I saw you play at Rowdy Dowdy a few weeks back, and I was thoroughly impressed with your dynamic as a band. You have great chemistry and just all around good stuff going on on stage. You’ve had a few lineup changes in the past; do you finally feel really good about the group?
Robert: Yeah, the lineup seems pretty solid at the moment.
Will: The band is more collaborative and fun than it ever has been, but we’re open to adding more members to expand the potential of our live show.
VM: There Is No Balance, your most recent record, was released in 2013. Do you guys have plans for a new album in the works?
Will: The last album came out seven months ago, and since then we’ve been recording our next one. We haven’t decided whether to release it soon or to make it a double-length and record a few more tracks first.
VM: First of all, congratulations on earning yourselves a main stage performance at AthFest this year! Who are you all most excited to see?
Will: Elf Power. And DEGA was great last night.
Robert: Futurebirds are one of my favorite bands, and seeing them in Athens is always pretty radical, so them of course. And one of their openers, Woodfangs, are another one of our favorite local bands.
VM: You guys clearly have a sense of humor, from the fantastic Jesus Christ critique on your website to the name of your band, Wieuca. Tell us a little about why you finally decided on Wieuca as a band name to represent you all as artists.
Will: Wieuca is straight, so we wanted it to represent us.
VM: What is your favorite song from the record to play live?
Will: We usually play our new songs at shows and try them in front of a crowd before recording them.
VM: Who came up with the idea behind the music video for “Low Probability”?
Robert: Will.
Will: The video stars a handsome young man with a mustache.
VM: What’s your favorite activity, besides playing music, to do together as a band?
Robert: Scoping out new and exciting ethnic cuisines. Which goes pretty well with our other favorite activity of teaching O’Reilly how to correctly pronounce certain words.
VM: What’s in the pipeline for Wieuca? Do you have any exciting plans in the future?
Will: We’re looking forward to releasing our new songs.
VM: I have to ask you my signature question as well: If you could choose the headliners (dead or alive) for a new music festival, who would play?
Will: It would be really cool to see Bill Doss with OTC. Or Vic Chesnutt.
Robert: You could make a pretty awesome festival solely with Athens musicians who have passed away…
AthFest 2014: Party Dolls x Vinyl Mag
After making their debut on Valentine’s Day 2013, the local collaborative supergroup, Party Dolls, knew they had created something awesome. Exactly one year later, they had an album under their belt, and they haven’t stopped playing since. Party Dolls, a conglomeration of members from multiple Athens/Atlanta area acts including The District Attorneys and Tedo Stone, will continue taking the local scene by storm this weekend at AthFest
Party Dolls have a huge Athens following, and they are all about putting on a good show. The group masters their attempt at a “mini-Arcade Fire” sound, and really fosters and rekindles the collab-rock genre. Their debut album, Love Wars Baby, is an album of anthems that front man Drew Beskin says “had to be written.”
We caught up with them before the fest to chat about what it’s like to be part of such a big collab project, who would play their dream music fest and what’s in store for Party Dolls in the future.
Vinyl Mag: So there are quite a few members in Party Dolls; you’re a kind musical collage featuring members of multiple Athens/Atlanta bands. Do you all have a ‘the more the merrier’ philosophy when it comes to the band?
Drew Beskin: We definitely have a more the merrier attitude for Party Dolls. The band was put together in a very spur-of-the-moment kind of way. We all have or have had bands that fit a very specific structure, so this is everyone’s side pop band where we can just let loose and see how weird we can make it.
VM: Your record has been out for a few good months now – what’s that like? How has the reaction been?
DB: It is great to have it out there. We worked on it casually over a year, and we are very proud of the record. We have had some great press and premieres from some very cool publications. People seem to like it; I am proud of it. That is all that matters. The live version is a trip, because we have accordion, violin and a bunch of random instruments that I have never had on stage before, and I get a huge kick out of that.
VM: A lot of the record, Love Wars Baby, alludes to a bad breakup. I’ve always been curious about what it’s like for the rest of the band to play a song about someone else’s breakup. Is it hard to get into that head space?
DB: By the time the songs were recorded, the meaning behind them kind of vanished. They just turn into songs that happened to be about the past. When we play them now, we just enjoy the music and hope the audience does as well. There is no message or hidden meaning.
VM: Is it easy for you all to collaborate, having come from such varying musical backgrounds and groups? Do your styles all align when you come together to create something new?
DB: Yeah, for sure. We all just want to do the song justice and have as much fun playing as possible. We want to show each other off; we have a lot of amazing musicians in the band right now.
VM: What kind of artists influence you as a group?
DB: A lot of Whiskeytown and Rilo Kiley. We made the album with just four people, but we wanted to try and get a kind of ‘mini-Arcade Fire’ sound. A lot going on in 10 very short pop songs.
VM: Who are you most excited to see at AthFest 2014?
DB: Probably Dead Confederate and Kishi Bashi.
VM: Alright, this is my signature question: if you could choose the headliners – dead or alive – for a new music festival, who would play?
DB: Prince, Ryan Adams and the Cardinals, Rilo Kiley, The Smiths and Oasis.
VM: What’s in store for you all in the future?
DB: Not quite sure post-Athfest. We have some new songs and might record another album under the Party Dolls name or we might start a new project. Kind of playing it by ear right now.
VM: What’s the hardest thing about being in a group with so many members?
DB: Probably trying to write new songs off the fly, so we have stuck to listening to demos and learning from there. It’s never really that hard though; we all want the same thing, and if someone isn’t feeling it, they usually have a better idea. We are all friends with each other, so it’s pretty easy.
VM: What’s the craziest experience you’ve had at a show thus far?
DB: Our band usually floats between having seven or eight members, so whenever we are able to pull that off and get the sound right and everyone is locked in and happy, that is a pretty crazy experience.
*Check out Party Dolls at Athfest Saturday at Hull Street Stage at 4:00 p.m. See you there!
AthFest 2014: Dank Sinatra x Vinyl Mag
It is safe to say that Dank Sinatra is a band that is as unique as the music they play. Originating from Athens, Georgia, these five members manage to fuse energy, joy, an electric mix and a dash of old school rock and roll to create an unforgettable sound in their newest album, Strange.
As they tour the east coast, Matt Henderson, Joe Gaines, Clint Meadows, Josh Birmingham, and Jimmy Mcalpin will take some time from playing concerts on hotel roof tops and travel back to the Classic City for their performance at AthFest.
We caught up with Matt and Jimmy to talk about their biggest influences, “The Dank Tank” and, of course, AthFest!
Vinyl Mag: You recently released your album, Strange – what was the inspiration for the album?
Jimmy Mcalpin: We sought out to make a tighter record than our previous releases and really start to hone a sound that we are continually working on improving and refining.
VM: I saw you recently played the song “Down South Georgia Boy” on BalconyTV Charleston. How was that experience, playing on the roof top of a Holiday Inn?
Matt Henderson: It was a great experience because we met two NASA engineers who were staying in Charleston at the Holiday Inn, and we were able to give them a copy of Strange and chat with them about the opportunity for a tour of the Milky Way in 2015.
VM: You play AtheFest on the 20th. How do you like playing Athens compared to other cities?
JM: Well it is always nice to drive 10 minutes to get to your gig. It’s a great town to play as well; you can always count on some people who are as in to live music as you are to be around for your show.
VM: How has Athens influenced your music?
JM: It probably hasn’t influenced our music in too many stylistic ways so much as it has in conditional ways. There is so much music and so many musicians that it creates an environment of having a good work ethic and an atmosphere of excitement about creating new music and sharing it with friends and the town you live in.
VM: Have you ever been to/played AthFest before?
MH: This is going to be our fourth time playing AthFest, and we would probably be around even if we weren’t, it being one of our favorite times of the year to be in Athens. Can’t wait to see all the other great bands.
VM: What can your fans expect at your show in the Green Room?
JM: We have been working hard lately writing songs and creating new music, and we are looking forward to the opportunity to play live again, so fans can expect to see a band that is ready to play out, have fun and blow stuff up.
VM: What are you currently listening to?
JM: We’ve been listening to a lot of Sibelius (Fifth Symphony) and the thoughts of such men as Ernest Hemingway and David Foster Wallace. Music is a very important thing to listen to as a musician, and it is equally as important to absorb as many other creative arts as possible to provoke creativity in yourself.
VM: What are some unexpected hobbies that each of you have besides music (other creative outlets?)?
JM: Matt is currently engaged in all the World Cup action happening down in Brasil, while Joe has been holed up in his house with a model train project that he is currently working on. He just finished the first boardwalk he will be using as a platform to the other stations. Also we have been playing a lot of monopoly lately.
VM: I recently read that you all are headlining this year’s Unitus Music Festival at Cherokee Farms. How does it feel to go from a starter band to headliner in just a few years?
MH: It is really nice to be sharing the stage with some of our friends in Sumilan and Funk You and being apart of the festival experience. Hopefully we can do some collaborating and get some other musicians on stage during our show.
VM: Are there any differences in your shows when you play a festival vs. a regular show?
JM: There is a lot of energy at a festival and that inevitably will make it into our performances at festival shows. The opportunity to share our music to a diverse audience is also in our thoughts when we are preparing for a festival show. We want to make sure we can deliver the best of what we have to offer to inspire the listeners and grow our fanbase.
VM: We have to know – where did “The Dank Tank” nickname originate?
MH: That is part of the long storied history of Dank-isms we have been writing and hope to publish in the coming months. Part of having a silly name is the opportunity to have fun with it, which we like to do.
VM: Ok last question. Have you finally calculated how you will play the first concert on the moon?
JM: We were doing some calculations recently about how many shows we would have to play in order to raise enough money and awareness to make a lunar show possible, but our calculator broke right in the middle of figuring it out. Once we raise enough money to get a new calculator (have to use a TI-83 because of the extensiveness of the lunar calculations) we can begin the process again.



















