Monday, September 17, 2012

On Tour in Two

Who wouldn't want to travel in a confined space with 6 grown men for 5 days, 41 road hours and 2,344 miles?

As scary as this proposal may sound to your every day corporate executive, it is the opportunity of a lifetime for a group of guys that got our start a few years back playing Johnny Cash and Rolling Stones tunes to a handful of friends at a hole in the wall in Chicago. "Blue September," as we are calling this short-run tour, is the culmination of years of work on honing our craft, creating our sound, playing live, telling/forcing our friends to come and see us live, and continuing to grow as writers, musicians and friends. The tour planning has been much more condensed and without a booking agency, there have been many lessons learned about recruiting bands, negotiating contracts with venues and debating every last possible detail. Thinking about every detail that has gone into this trip, from the big things, like what cities to play ... all the way down to the smallest of details, like who is bringing the hand towels ... it is stunning that we are only two days away and that mostly everything is under control ... (where is some wood to knock on ...)


If this is the first you are hearing of our tour ... WAKE UP!!! The tour will begin on Wed, September 19th at the Hard Rock Cafe Nashville, where we will be playing with local bands Classic Addict and Adam James and the Firecrackers. This is a big event for us as Nashville is such a key city for musicians and we will be meeting several contacts to expand our network in the industry. We will move from there to Atlanta, where we will be giving a lunch-time performance (1PM EST) for the employees and staff of Sixthman LLC. They are the company that puts on many of the world's biggest and most awesome "concerts-at-sea" or Rock Cruises.

The tour will continue to Ocean City, Maryland where we will be performing in-studio at WOCM or www.irieradio.com at 8:30am EST. WOCM was the first station nation-wide to start spinning our record and this was an easy decision to come in for a visit. 
 
From Ocean City we will travel up to Philadelphia, where we will be playing a cool little bar called Rebel Rock Bar with local bands Music Box Dynamo and The Great Party. With a little side trip to meet the Zimmerman's at State College, we will then make our way to Cleveland, to play the World Famous Cleveland Agora. So many acts have come through that venue and we are proud to be playing such an amazing venue with SIX other bands!

We hope that you will keep up with us as we make our way across the country. We will attempt to keep you all posted on this blog daily, as well as Instagram (vintagebluechi), twitter @vintagebluechi, and Facebook (www.facebook.com/vintagebluemusic).

In addition, if you know anyone in these cities, please let them know we will be coming though!


THANKS!








Thursday, August 9, 2012

Vintage Blue Lolla Review


Welcome to the 157th review of Lollapalooza that you have probably read.  That said, there are a couple things in this review that you will NOT see elsewhere.  First, we are a band, we are not professional reviewers and therefore are not looking to push our favorites on you, nor do we have any ulterior motives.  Second, many of these bands were brand new to us, which means we had no preconceived notions or expectations, so if someone was less than stellar, they probably were, and if someone was amazing, it was probably because we finally had cooled off and drank fluids.

As you surely know, this Lolla 2012 was a bit crazy at times (two 19 year-olds punching an 11 year old for a beach ball) or (the great evacuation) but overall, it was a pretty HOT, but otherwise enlightening weekend. 

Pre-Lolla Show at House of Blues Chicago:
The Givers, Passion Pit

It feels funny to say, but the surprise of the festival for us happened the day before the official start of Lollapalooza.  At House of Blues on Thursday was a full night of great music to get everyone amped up  .... success.  The Givers, an indie (because who isn't these days) band from Lafayette, Louisiana put on a passionate, solid and rocking set, led by the drumming, uke-playing, xylophone slamming, Tiffany Lamson, whose gravelly Janis Joplin-esque vocals set the stage for a great night and weekend of music.  While we have not heard their recorded music, The Givers were great live.  Passion Pit followed with their poppy upbeat dance tunes. 

Day One:
Metric, Head & The Heart, The Shins, M83, Black Keys, Black Sabbath


While Lolla was just warming up outside in the oppressive heat and humidity on Friday, some of us had work to do.  So, while unfortunate because we missed a few acts like Blind Pilot, we arrived at the event around 4:00 for an early evening set from Metric at the Bud Light Stage.  At first most people warned that Metric would be just another electronic music fiasco, but Metric was pretty awesome.  Led by Emily Haines, who consistently moved around and owned that giant stage, Metric powered through a bunch of fast-paced tunes while it became increasingly clear that everyone had already had the energy sucked out of them by the 100 degree temps in the sun.

After already handing over some cash for surprisingly affordable drinks to keep from passing out we headed over to the diametrically opposed (see what we did there) Head And The Heart.  While they may have been a stark contrast to Metric, they played a perfect set, at a perfect time.  It was a low key, well orchestrated and exceedingly well-delivered performance that led right into a eerily similar performance next door by The Shins.  Both bands delivered a fairly safe collection of songs, rarely turning heads, but providing a chill soundtrack to a hot summer day, in other words, exactly what everyone on the South side of the park was looking for at that point.


After The Shins and grabbing some grub we headed back to Grant Park South to grab a good spot for The Black Keys.  The band immediately preceding The Keys was M83.  We will readily admit that we are generally not big fans of electronic music (yeah, we hear you ... why did you go to Lolla then, blah blah blah) but M83 actually brought a full, and very talented, band.  The jammed through some pretty nondescript tunes while people essentially vibed to the tunes and light show.  Then M83 hit their big single and people went crazy ... and M83 killed it.  The frenchman put on a good show.


The Black Keys.  If I have to tell one more person that there are actually more than two people in that band I might lose it.  However, Auerbach and Carney served as perfect first-night headliners slamming their way through a bunch of their tunes, bringing the raw power that they forged in their basement, all the way onto the massive Red Bull Soundstage at Lolla.  But ... we HAD TO GO SEE OZZY!!!  Black Sabbath was most likely everything that everyone said they were, old, sloggy, slow, impassioned, etc ... but who cares?!?!?  It is not often that you get to see one of the biggest acts in the history of rock n' roll in such a unique and awesome location.  And for the record, as we walked over from The Keys and heard the open chord to "Ironman" we started jogging.  We didn't want to miss one of the most iconic rock songs ever.  And even though Ozzy is not a sprite young man any more, he delivered a solid rock show and showed the youngsters how it was done in the old days.



Day Two:
JC Brooks & The Uptown Sound, JEFF The Brotherhood, Delta Spirit, JJ Grey & Mofro, Fun., Franz Ferdinand, Washed Out, Calvin Harris, RHCP



Even though it was a draining and HOT first day, we pulled our lives together to see one of Chicago's own, JC Brooks & The Uptown Sound.  At noon, JC had some of the highest temperatures of the weekend as the sun beat down on everyone at the Sony stage.  However, what the band delivered was a high-powered, power soul set, if there is such a thing.  Front man Jayson Brooks was entertaining, witty and foul-mouthed, but in a funny and timely way ... at one point explaining the difference between a "happy dance and a weed dance" and showing us a version of each.  The set was so great that Benny decided to jump over to the autograph tent and say hey to the band.



After we stopped sweating and grabbed some liquids, we headed over to see Nashville duo, that is right, duo, JEFF the Brotherhood.  These two brothers rocked a drum kit and a killer faded blue Gibson SG and filled the medium-sized and normally horrible sounding Playstation Stage with a gritty rock set that would have made the 2002 Black Keys proud.  A solid and surprising performance by a band we really did not know much about.


After JEFF was Delta Spirit, a band from San Diego, but with a sound more suited for a band from the south as they incorporated some different instruments and uniquely orchestrated a pretty solid set.  While none of us found it to be remarkable, it was a good set, only complaint was the lack of a variety of sound.  Each song sounded similar and there was never a song that showed off what was obviously a talented group of musicians.




As the clouds gathered during Delta we shuffled our sweaty and stinky bodies over to see JJ Grey & Mofro, who we had been advised, would be amazing.  Literally only a couple songs in we were notified (via our handy Lolla app) that the festival was being evacuated.  We beat the rush, walked a block and chilled at the nearest Starbucks and ate rice crispy treats.  So, basically, JJ Grey was amazing.  Ha ha.


After the rain delay, the ground crew rolled the tarp off the field and Lolla invited everyone back to play ball.  The bad news, one of our top 5 band we wanted to see Alabama Shakes had been cancelled, and the whole schedule had been changed.  We did our best to catch a few songs from a few different acts, the first of which was Fun.  What a perfect way to re-open the festival.  After all of us had first sweated out our energy and then tried to outrun a ridiculous storm, we needed a band that was all about performing.  While the recorded version of Fun's most recent album has a plethora of auto-tune and extra effects, the live show was a bit more rocky and gritty.  It was entertaining, not necessarily polished, but perfect for a HUGE crowd of half-bummed, rain-soaked music fans.

Before Fun. had finished we had already determined to find our way to the front of the crowd for Franz Ferdinand on the Bud Light stage.  Fighting to the front of a Lolla crowd after a rainstorm can only be likened to a twisted combination of frogger, paintball and jack & the beanstalk ... you are constantly finding the open areas, hopping in, then ducking under waving flags and hands, while escaping the wobbling arms of some poor drunk bastard moving in slow motion and looking for an unlucky landing zone.  However, this crew was successful as we secured a great spot right in front of the sound board for the Franz set.  Being the first act after the storm on the Bud Light stage meant no video or other eyecandy (as you can see from the photo) but Franz did not need it.  They delivered an awesome and energy-filled show, pleasing the pretty sizeable crowd that had decided to return after the evacuation.

On our way from Franz to the Red Hot Chilli Peppers we briefly stopped by:

Washed Out ... who oddly enough was having technical difficulties because the stage had been ... well, washed out.

Calvin Harris ... You read earlier that we were not huge fans of EDM, but this guy wrote the remix that everyone is singing right now ... "ooooooh sometimes, I get a good feeeeelin ... yeah."  So we decided to happen by Perry's Stage for the first time.  It immediately became apparent why we had been hearing the thud from Perry's all weekend.  What, in years prior had been a cool tent, where the ravers went to party, was now an all out attack on the senses which started with ground-rumbling bass and sub-bass.  Calvin is extremely talented, but his talent was lost in all the ear-numbing bass and we missed all the highs and trills that make "the drop" in EDM even more anticipated and awesome.



And then there were the Peppers ... or should we say Flea and some other guys that play with Flea.  The Red Hot Chilli Peppers is essentially a legacy act now, part of the group at this years' Lolla of the reformed rockers like The Afghan Whigs or At The Drive-In.  However, with a headlining spot and no real legitimate act against them on Saturday night, RHCP had the opportunity to put on a great show and reintroduce some of the younger crowd to what made them so popular back in their hay day.  Their performance ... well, it was fine.  Not amazing, not bad, just fine.  Kiedis missed vocals at times and a few words here and there, but overall served as a functional frontman, but the show was all about Flea and Will Ferr - err ... Chad Smith.  Flea was the one given all the solos and was really the only one that interacted with the crowd, at one point saying "f*ck the 1%."  We started thinking ... um, aren't YOU GUYS in the 1%, but we digress.  Overall a solid set from RHCP, but given how big they were when we were young musicians, I think we all were hoping for something more.




Day  Three:
Trampled By Turtles, The Walkmen, Gary Clark Jr., Gaslight Anthem, Of Monsters & Men, Florence & The Machine, Miike Snow, Jack White


Let us just go ahead and say that we either are getting too old, or are not getting prescribed the right drugs to keep up with the folks who were going to Lolla every day from 12 - 11.  It was so hot each day and that will suck the energy out of you.  We managed to get over to Grant Park at around 2:30 to catch some of the Trampled by Turtles set.  It was great to see these talented musicians from Minneapolis get a mainstage, especially given their more "bluegrass" leaning type music.  We also ran into our good friend Jay O'Malley from Chicago band Sunfallen, who we chatted with for a while.  Our conversation was only broken up once, as TBT busted into the fastest and guttiest tune they played all day.  It was pretty awesome.  Definitely a band we would like to see in a more intimate setting.

Before we headed over to one of our most anticipated couple hours of the weekend, we stuck around for another "legacy" act as we listened to The Walkmen on the Sony stage.  Only spent about 10 - 15 minutes there before we headed to Gary Clark Jr., but their sound was solid and rock, which was a good primer for the rest of the day.  Gary Clark Jr. was amazing.  An exceptionally talented guitarist, it was unfortunate that he was stuck on the Playstation stage (which in our opinion has the worst sound) but he made the most of it, delivering blues-rock with passion and fire to a pretty large crowd gathered around him.  Definitely one of the highlight sets of the weekend and made us regret not catching tickets to his show the night before at Schubas.


From there it was on to the show that everyone had been amping up for us ... Gaslight Anthem.  These guys are a legend in their own right as they have had THE BOSS come up with them on stage several times in their careers, which is just pretty awesome.  Hailing from New Jersey, these guys delivered a solid 30 minutes of their classics, but nothing that stood out as exceptional.  In the last three songs they put an excellent bow on the show they had started wrapping.  The last chunk featured two slower ballad tunes that showed the ability of the band to tell a story and not just gut punch you with power chords and an ungodly amount of reverb.  The ballads were delivered really well and they wrapped the show with a great rocker that drove the pretty large crowd wild.  A great set on the newer Google Play stage, which was placed in a little grove of trees, making the set feel unique and more intimate.

At this point we had some time to kill, so we had some excellent burgers from Kuma's Korner and some ridiculously good ice cream from Windsor Ice Cream Shoppe ... UN-BE-LIEV-ABLE.  After our "fat-kid coma" we noticed a ton of people re-gathering at the Google Play stage, so we hung around for Of Monsters & Men.  We at first were a bit caught off guard because most of the people that we waded through leaving Gaslight all looked like 14 year olds and Of Monsters seemed to be an "atypical" band for a teenager, especially with Perry's stage still pumping thuds the whole weekend.  But the few songs we heard were pretty decent and we will probably check them out in the future.


By far one of the bigger crowds of the weekend was for Florence & The Machine.  Clearly beloved by the festival planners, Florence was up against virtually no one (At The Drive-In, Big Gigantic and The Jezabels) and that drove almost every Lolla attendee to the Bud Light stage.  Florence donned a giant flowing red gown and pranced around stage while her band played a solid set over her melodramatic crooning.  The coolest touch was the harp playing, which added a layer not heard very often at live shows.  However, for us there were more important issues at hand, namely checking out some good locations for Jack White to close out the evening.


Before Jack White went on, there was one more dance party to be had at the Sony stage where Miike Snow entertained a weary group of EDM soldiers.  Flanked by two dudes who basically hung out on stage and pressed a button every once in a while, Snow delivered lyrics over electric melody lines, but suffered from not having a true "frontman" persona.  Clearly Snow writes good music, we note "Black and Blue" as a pretty great tune, but the band came across as fairly lifeless, which is hard to do when your crowd is dancing and grooving to what you are playing.  But we suppose this is part of the deal with dance music, it is not so much about who is playing, but what is playing and who you are with.  In that case, we enjoyed the set and hanging out on this final Lolla evening together.

The final headliner for the festival was Jack White.  He was probably the headliner that most people really did not understand, or truly believe was worthy of the slot.  After the set, no one was wondering any more.  White delivered a truly blistering, almost garage band sounding set, rocking and grinding through all of his musical catalog, while switching from guitar to piano and back to guitar without missing a beat.  Jack White was a sorely missed element of this Lollapalooza, an extremely talented songwriter AND musician, that performed songs that were able to capture both elements of his musicianship. 


Overall that was probably the biggest thing we noticed from the festival.  We jokingly said that "to play Lolla you need one of these things: a full-time tamborine player, a fiddle player, a TON of reverb/delay and a lead singer that yells at people."  If you can combine these things ... even BETTER!  Ha ha.  But in all seriousness ... there was a ton of talent on display at Lollapalooza.  The festival inspired us to keep working on our craft and to also focus on putting on an excellent show.  The idea of live music is to deliver the music you carefully crafted elsewhere, but also to do it in a way that entertains.  During Lollapalooza, we heard great music and we heard okay music, we saw excellent performances and some so-so ones, but it was rare to see the excellence together at once, however, we definitely were entertained.





 

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Vintage Blue @ Lolla Preview

It is that time of year, where Chicago has cleansed itself of the Pitchfork hipsters and welcomes in the eclectic indie-drenched suburb dominated plaid-wearing fedora-adorned fans of Lollapalooza.

Unlike most blogs will tell you who you should see at Lollapalooza ... we are just here to report.  Given our own eclectic background of influences, we don't judge and will try to take in a variety of different acts.  For a couple of us, this will be our first Lollapalooza, so we are like eager-eyed kids at Christmas, mostly because we did not wade through a foot of mud sewage singing along to "My Hero" with Dave Grohl last year.  (Although we probably would have paid to do so).

That said, here are the acts the band will check out this year.  Let us know who you guys are going to see, or who you would like us to tell you about!



Friday





Saturday




Sunday
Kid Color  -  Bombay Bicycle Club  -  Trampled By Turtles  -  Gary Clark Jr.  -  Little Dragon  -  Gaslight Anthem  -  The Sheepdogs  -  Of Monsters & Men  -  Florence & The Machine  -  Miike Snow  -  Jack White



That is all for now ... STAY TUNED!!

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Lifehouse and Old St. Pats

We should apologize for our brief hiatus from blogging ... but there is so much good stuff coming up that we wanted to have a venue for telling you that are interested all about it! This past Saturday, our band had the pleasure to open for one of our biggest shows to date ... The World's Largest Block Party at Old St. Patrick's Church in Chicago. We shared the stage with Brett Dennen and Lifehouse. We had the chance to hang with these musicians and the following materialized.

One look at current media reveals the popular view of musicians ... Tom Cruise from Rock of Ages anyone?  But our band got to spend a bit of time hanging out with the guys from Lifehouse, and we can honestly say that they were really genuinely good dudes.  While we may not have all been huge LH fans before, we certainly will follow the band from here on out, just for the manner in which they treated us.

For starters, our band always has a "rho-sham-bo" when it comes to knocking on the proverbial door to a big band's green room.  Usually good 'ole Benny has to do the honors, but has been successful so far in not getting beaten to the ground by security, or embarrassed by walking in on a greek orgy (again see Rock of Ages).  

When it came to Jason Wade from LH, Will, our drummer, caught him at the food table and just snagged the opportunity to chat with him.  Not only was Jason totally cool about it (because let's face it, he might not have heard of Vintage Blue yet) but he came over and stood and talked with about 7 of us that were sitting in sweat pools after our set.  Then he also took pictures with us and was generally just awesome.  Definitely a moment we will not forget.

So many good things have been happening for us and we just cannot help but be pleased to know that being persistent, hard-working and kind actually does pay off.  Much like it clearly has for Jason and all the guys from LH.  

WE HOPE TO SEE ALL OF YOU SOON:

---- SUMMERFEST on Friday July 6th @2:30 ----
--- VIP Show for Dave Matthews July 7th @ Alpine Valley ---

Friday, May 4, 2012

Songwriting (How it Almost Happens)

We have a secret to tell you.  Our first record featured every song we had written as a band.  Pretty crazy.  Many musicians spend a lifetime writing songs that they hone and craft until a tenth of them are selected, carefully ordered and then produced over months and months of recording.  Why did we choose to lay down all of our material?  At the core of it, we suppose we really did not know if we would ever get the chance to make a "real" record again.  We were so fortunate to meet the people we met and make the connections we made, that we just were not sure we would ever have the opportunity to do it again. What if we never wrote another song?

Writing music is hard work, nerve-wracking and exhausting, but it can also be fun, exciting and a personal psychology lesson.  Often times writing music can be as simple as writing down a simple melody and adding some meaningful lyrics.  Other times songs sweep into your mind while you are walking to work, or eating a sandwich or hanging out with someone you love.  But, turning music you wrote into a record is a whole different beast.  There are plenty of songs out in the world that are amazing songs, written by songwriters or bands, that will never become a record.  The reason is, creating a record is like creating a piece of art.  Do you think Monet would have finished one of his paintings if the first lily he painted was lopsided and looked more like a pancreas?  What would Bob Ross have been without "happy clouds"? A record is a musician's chance to let you into their mind and to tell you what they are and who they want to be.  We believe our record did the first, but probably not the second.

We went into the studio armed with a collection of songs that we really wanted on a record ... NOT a collection of songs that WERE a record.  The distinction is key.  Don't get us wrong, we are so proud of the product.  We still get huge grins every time one of our songs is played on the radio or comes up on our ipod.  But as we head into writing material for our next album, we want to grow and learn about ourselves, our band, our sound and about what we want to be.

In Mat Kearney's song "In the Middle" he rap-sings about making records when he says "one life to write one, two years to repeat."  In his own capricious way Mat describes the labor of love that is a band's first album, and the stress and pressure to repeat a process that may have taken literally, as Mat says, a lifetime to produce, within a year or two.


What we hope you hear, as we begin to foster these songs by playing them live and sharing them with all of you, is that we are growing.  We hope that you can see the development of our songwriting and we hope that eventually we will find a solid group of tunes that we will take to the studio as a record.  The result, we believe, will be a leaner, meaner, tighter group of songs that will come to define Vintage Blue.  Look out.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Cover Songs

Ask any band that survives by writing their own music playing live what are their recurring band "discussions" and you are sure to receive any number of answers.  They might range from things like ... "our bassist is always hammered," to "our lead singer constantly complains about her hair."  However there is always one band discussion that gets more heated than most, and the topic would seem so petty and simple to most people outside the band ...

Recently our band had a heated discussion about whether we should cover the Fitz and The Tantrums tune "Moneygrabber."  Some guys in the band really liked the tune and felt that it played to our strengths ... it has a horn section, it has a cool groove, a female backup singer, etc.  Others in the band were strongly against the tune as the Fitz version doesn't even have a guitar and we have two!

We played the song through a couple times at practice and it sounded good for a first run, but not everyone was sold.  Over the next few days a heated battle ensued.  The battle lines were drawn over how to choose a cover.  Why is this such an important thing for a band?  We suggest you think about some of your favorite concerts that you have ever attended.  What do you remember most?  Surely you remember the two or three 'hit' songs, when the crowd was singing along or waiving their lighters to "Every Rose Has Its Thorn," but you probably remember when Dave Matthews played a freaking 10 minute solid "Burnin' Down the House," or when John Mayer covered "Free Fallin'."

The fact is, choosing a cover song is an important decision, because with that single choice, you have the opportunity to give a fan attending your show an insight into your band; an insight into what your band likes and to how we can creatively adapt to fit someone else's song into their style.  One way to consider the cover song as a band, is to consider it as your opportunity to showcase your personality outside of the songs and lyrics people have associated with you.

Our story ended like this ... We decided to do "Moneygrabber."  We all committed to the song, came up with a guitar part that fit the tune, and even put in some theatrical pieces to really turn it into a great performance.  We performed it this past Saturday at Double Door in Chicago and the response was awesome.  Whether or not people knew the song was irrelevant.  We had so much fun delivering the song ... and THAT is the key.


Saturday, April 7, 2012

The Importance of YOU!

Maybe you have read about our recent campaign to play at Bonnaroo.  We got the idea because recently the band came across an article about Danika Holmes (article here).  Danika is an indie artist from Iowa who had a dream to play the Heartland Jam Music Festival in Davenport, Iowa.  She contacted the festival talent buyers multiple times and received no response.  While many artists may have given up at this time, Danika decided to re-tool and motivate her fans.

Danika decided to start a campaign at 4am on her social media sites, with the intention to get herself into the Heartland Jam.  By 8 pm that same day, 100 of her fans had posted on the Heartland page.  By 9 pm the concert promoters contacted Danika and invited her to play on their MAIN STAGE!

This story was such a great inspiration to us that we started our own little campaign.  We are aiming for one of the largest festivals in the country - The Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival in Manchester, TN.   Please post on the Bonnaroo FB page any photos, video, or other VB items you may have with this message: #BonnarooNeedsVintageBlue .


The bottom line of this story is that our band has always been about the fans.  We started out entertaining family and friends, and have grown our little enterprise to heights we never imagined.  Along the way we have gained so many new friends and new fans.  We appreciate everything you do for us, and want you to know that every person you tell about our band, every post, and every "like" that you make, IT DOES HELP!

So please, keep tweeting, keep sharing our music and pages, and post about us anywhere you think we should be!!  Radio, TV, Venues, Festivals ... YOU TELL THEM!  Your voice MATTERS!  And thank you from all of us.

Thank you!
     -  Vintage Blue