Avi Wisnia: Open, Unreserved and New

 While every artist today enters the music industry ready to pave their own way through this unpredictable and sometimes threatening landscape, they all promote their EPs and records through the same tactic: live performance. This part of being a full-time musician excites Avi Wisnia.

“My schedule is kind of crazy,” he states, “but I love the challenges that come with it; I always play for a new audience. Playing one of my songs live is always a new experience, and I love the spontaneity and openness that comes with doing so.”

Roger Greenawalt on ukulele and band

After reviewing Avi Wisnia’s performance at CMJ 2011 right here on Music Historian’s Hear; Don’t Listen, I was set on interviewing him for a feature article. This past Saturday, I arranged a meeting with Avi backstage at the Brooklyn Bowl following his performance in the Beatles Complete Compilation with the Ukulele band.

During our conversation in the poorly insulated loft right above the Brooklyn Bowl stage, Avi talked about the obstacles he had to overcome before entering a studio. These challenges followed his from his pre-college years all the way to recording his first full-length album, Something New. Today Avi leaps over hurdles in order to do what he loves most: getting others excited about music.

“I want people to feel like they’re taking away something they haven’t heard before”

“I feel music is all about expressing yourself in the moment and creating that communal experience with the audience.

“Whenever people listen to me perform or sing on a record, I want them to feel like they’re taking away something they haven’t heard before – a mixing of different styles – something new.”

Avi Wisnia at the Brooklyn Bowl, January 14th.

Something New is also the title of his first full-length recorded album, one that evolved from his 2007 EP, Avi Wisnia Presents. As I researched Avi’s background online, I noticed he rerecorded many of his songs from his first album for his latest one. Further into our conversation, I discovered that rerecording these songs was essential to Avi. He wanted to present himself as the same musician from his EP on his full-length feature.

“I started performing my own music for people while I was in college, just to see their reaction. They would come up to me and ask for copies of my music to take home with them. This led me to recording an album.

“I brought my band from New York City to New Jersey to make this record in the a Synagogue where my father was a rabbi. My uncle, who was a cantor in that same temple, engineered our recordings.

“Working on this album was a real grassroots effort: I felt like were recording the songs just as they were in that moment. Everything we recorded for Avi Wisnia Presents was only a first or second take.

“Creating Something New gave me the opportunity to rerecord these songs exactly the way I always heard them in my mind. Although I felt more pressured to realize my own songs, we really made the most of the recording space – incorporating different sounds to bring the most out of the songs.”

  The ability to hear a brand new song before writing it to paper is nothing short of amazing and sought-after in the music industry. However, it would be years before Avi learned to trust his own ability.

“I didn’t accept the idea of projecting my influences through my own music, but then I embraced it”

“It took me a surprisingly long time to put songs onto paper. I thought if the song wasn’t going to be a masterpiece, then I didn’t want to write it down. I didn’t get over this until college, and before that; I never really allowed myself to finish songs. I eventually realized that every song I composed wasn’t going to be complete or perfect.

“For a long time, I also didn’t accept the idea of projecting my musical influences through my music. At first, I didn’t want to sound like someone else. Later, I embraced the fact that I couldn’t escape my influences. Now, I channel all the songs I grew up listening to through my voice and live performance.”

Avi proves to me that a musician can’t escape his or her greatest musical influences. These help shape an artist’s proclivity for a specific style. For instance, some tracks featured on Something New include musical elements popularly used in 20th century music, like ‘song quoting,’ which is present in the title track, “Something New,” and the 12-bar blues form in “Rabbit Hole.”

I then ask myself, why call a record from today, which pays so much homage to the styles that were new before our time, “Something New?”

The intimate mix of Bossa Nova, west coast jazz, acoustic folk, and blues 

“This was my first full-length album, and it was an introduction to me as full-time recording artist. It displayed my flexibility and diversity as a musician.

“Also, I want people to hear a new mix of different musical styles,” some of which include acoustic folk, west coast jazz, blues, and Bossa Nova.

I then asked Avi what he liked about these genres, and he responded:

“Looking back to all the records I listened to growing up, my favorite track on every album was the last, the really quiet and intimate one. You find that same intimacy and mellowness in folk, west coast jazz and Bossa Nova. Although they are different styles, they channel that same idea of mellowness and intimacy.”

Songs like “Rabbit Hole” and “Sink” focus lyrically on intimate issues like foolish young love and hitting rock-bottom. Musically, the slow tempo and improvisational style in “Rabbit Hole” helps both the attentive and recreational listener transcend to a silent space, closed off from the busy world. I asked Avi to talk about “Rabbit Hole” and I was surprised by his motivation behind this track. It was not what I initially assumed.

“One night, while I was half-asleep in my college dorm room, I wrote down a line that stuck in my head. I then spent the next 5 hours into the morning hours trying to develop it, and soon, it turned into a song. While it made sense to me as I wrote it, I still had to be sure it made sense in the morning.

“When you experience a moment like this, when an idea for a song just comes to your mind, you have to let it take you places. Just go with it.”

Avi then also explained that not all songs come to him as naturally. The story behind “Sink” is dramatically different.

“Sometimes, you have to put work into a song. Then the inspiration comes later”

“For “Sink” the idea of melody and rhythm were there, but I had trouble with both the lyrics and tying together different segments of the song. 

“When I took the song to the studio, I wasn’t sure how to communicate the track to either the musicians or the producers. Something was missing, and the song wasn’t translating. I also struggled with this song when I performed it for others.

“Sink” was the last song on the album to get attention, and I, along with my musicians and producers, felt it was holding the rest of the album back. I was pretty sure I would throw “Sink” into the trash.

“Then one day, when I was visiting my childhood home in northern Philadelphia, I went down to the basement and found a Fisher Price Xylophone. I started playing and found that the range of sound on this toy-xylophone fit the octave within “Sink.” So I brought to the studio, put a microphone to it, and started playing. Afterward, we invited some friends to sing a simple back-up chorus, and eventually, all these elements happened to sync everything.

“Sometimes, you have to put work into a song. Then the inspiration for the song comes later.”

The uncertainty of the next hit song, masterpiece, or duration of the next full-length recorded album may frighten some, but not Avi.

“The constant change allows me to express myself in different ways”

 “As I got more into the business, I had to remind myself that in the end, it is all about being excited by music.

“Before I became an artist, I was a music teacher for pre-school aged children. When I gave them a music lesson or handed them an instrument, they were always excited to play music. Even if their playing did not sound like a song, they were happy to express themselves.” This gratifying experience encouraged Avi to adopt a more positive attitude towards in his own life as a musician.

“Every time I go on stage, I remind myself to be open and unreserved when performing. I shouldn’t worry about being “good enough.” Music in this way can be very forgiving; and it’s a great way to get rid of the hang-ups in life and enjoy the moment.” And he wants to continue doing this even as a full-time recording artist.

“I love going on the road and meeting new people and also feeling the vibes of different cities. The constant changes in location challenge me to express myself in different ways, and I never want that to stop. I always run in to something new.”

A Conversation with Radiation City’s Randy Bemrose: The Process of Creating and Releasing “The Hands That Take You”

On December 3rd, I interviewed Randy Bemrose, the drummer from independent, Portland-based group, Radiation City.

Randy Bemrose

I originally learned about the band from a showcase at the Brooklyn pub, Spike Hill back in October. I had briefly talked with front man, Cameron Spies and keyboardist, Patti King, right before they took the stage. Naturally, I wanted to continue my conversation with Radiation City, so I invited them to be an interview feature for the month of December right here on Music Historian’s Hear; Don’t Listen.

In my conversation with Randy, I learned about Radiation City’s song writing process and their experience releasing the album, The Hands That Take You.

“What you hear on the record is often a first or second take”

“I would say the making The Hands that Take You was fast and loose,” explains Randy. “The sound was literally the result of emotional release.”

“Park,” a song off their debut album, is what Randy describes “a cathartic song about the budding relationship between Cameron and Lizzy (one of the keyboardists and singers). There’s this palpable excitement, a great deal of doubt and about a thousand miles between the two of them.

“I think we all appreciate the catharsis while being careful to not wear our hearts on our sleeves.”

As the conversation continued, I also learned about how Randy’s musicianship and skills are always tested during recording sessions. He explains:

 “We don’t take too much time to over think our music; our last album was truly a collaborative effort. On a number of the songs from this album where I played the drums, I had never heard the tunes before we started tracking. So what you hear on the record is often a first or second take. It was certainly a learning experience for me.”

Further in the interview, I became curious about the typical composition process behind every Radiation City song.

“We start with what we call the Nut – the basic idea for the song where one of us, or sometimes, Cameron and Lizzy collaboratively create. We then cut some sort of demo and play it as a group and start wood-shedding from there.

“Sometimes that demo will become the foundation for the framework of a song, or sometimes we’ll have a particular sound quality that requires starting over from scratch.

“From here, the recording and writing processes intertwine, and we basically flesh it out as we go. This is when the part of “fast and loose” come in” – the time of emotional release.”

As Radiation City worked to release The Hands that Take You, Randy claims time was the greatest obstacle.

“It didn’t leave us time to half-step or second guess”

“We had the release show booked before we had even started recording the second half. In hindsight, this was a blessing and a curse.

“On one hand, it forced us to keep our noses at the grindstone and didn’t allow us the time to half step or second guess. On the other hand, we were incredibly stressed out about it – we were cutting things way too close for comfort, not to mention prudence in some respects. Creatively, we were pretty confident about it, but a lot of the business involved with releasing the album was truncated.”

The expedited effort was definitely worthwhile. The Hands That Take You was released on a national-level with the help of the record label, Tender Loving Empire.

“It was great, having their assistance in getting the record out there as opposed to pushing it ourselves and waiting to shop for the next label,” stated Randy. “They are hard workers and salt-of-the-earth kind of people – sweet as peach pie.”

This accomplishment might have helped Randy decide that he had found the right group – the one he hopes to stay with “forever.”

Coming together from different backgrounds

Before Radiation City, Randy spent 10 years being part of at least a dozen bands. He also lived in New Orleans for some time, drumming in NOLA groups Jean-Eric and The Bellys.

Radiation City at Spike Hill in Brooklyn. (Left to Right) Matt, Randy and Cameron

At the time Randy was living in New Orleans; Cameron was in San Francisco, playing in a group called Raised by Robots, as well as another group, Spesus Christ. It was here Cameron met Lizzie; and the two started collaborating shortly afterward.

Meanwhile, the bass player, Matt, was playing in The Shotgun, The Intelligence, and a few other groups from the Northwest; and Patti was completing her performance studies at Truman State College in Missouri.

While they all come from different performance backgrounds, Randy, Cameron, Lizzie, Matt and Patti are all true musicians that have a natural ability to collaborate and create some of today’s most notable progressive rock music.

“We take our art seriously. I wouldn’t have it any other way.”

(Left to Right) Lizzy, Matt, Randy, Cameron and Patti

In addition to finishing their latest west coast tour, Radiation City just released a remix by PoPoPePe of their third single off The Hands That Take You, “Babies.” They are also scheduled to play a New Years Eve Show in Portland with Nurses, Wild Ones and DJ Beyonda.

Randy also talked about Radiation City’s riveting plans for 2012. They include:

“A video for “The Color of Industry”; a spring single release for South by South West; a summer album, and a ton of touring.”

At the end of our conversation, I thanked Randy for his time and expressed how I appreciate when musicians are honest about their work. He replied, “Of course. Interviews where people are just whistling Dixie don’t thrill me much…unless it’s the classical quick wit of John Lennon, or something.

“Anyways, we’re not super serious people, but we do take our art seriously. I wouldn’t have it any other way.”

Just In: New Video and Sound Cloud from Radiation City!

Earlier today, I interviewed Radiation City’s drummer, Randy Bemrose for the December band feature on Hear; Don’t Listen. In my interview with Randy, I learned about a lot of exciting projects coming up for the band in 2012. However, you’ll have to standby on Music Historian’s blog to learn about them. In the meantime, listen to Radiation City’s sound cloud and watch their video of their song, Babies.

http://www.deathandtaxesmag.com/165281/exclusive-radiation-city-babies-popopepe-remix/

The Portland-based band, Radiation City will kick off their west coast tour tomorrow in Eugene, OR. Visit the link above to see their tour schedule.

Seth Glier’s Food for Thought: Giving Back to Communities with Food and Music

Thanksgiving is upon us, and I would like to talk about how one up and coming singer-songwriter gives to his own music as well as to communities all across America. Seth Glier is currently wrapping up the Food For Thought tour. The tour is an effort that helps food banks all over the country feed the hungry.

Seth Glier: The Next Right Thing

In my interview with Seth Glier for the Music Historian blog, Hear; Don’t Listen, I talk to Seth about his efforts towards tackling hunger. In return, I learn about the genuine thought, emotion and experiences Seth puts behind his music.

The Food for Thought Tour

“We started planning this tour in April of 2011. At first, we were reaching out to performance venues and organizations in the community to help make this tour happen. Then, we looked at the schedule and noticed the tour would take place a few weeks before Thanksgiving. So we wanted to do something that created a feeling of thanks, and decided to collect food for people in need,” explained Seth.

Hunger currently affects 146 million Americans everyday – that’s one in every six people. As part of their Food for Thought tour, Seth and his guitar player, Ryan Hommel make time between shows and traveling to deliver collected donations of canned food to food banks. The two video blogged about one of these stops last Sunday: the Akron-Canton Food Bankin Ohio.

Guitarist, Ryan Hommel

In my telephone conversation with Seth, he tells me, “When we went to Ohio, we learned 45% of the state lives on food stamps. We also learned that the Akron-Canton Food Bank sends over 75,000 pounds of food to 40,000 people a week. By next year, they would like to send a total number to 20 million pounds of food. It was apparent that this type of tenacity is needed when tackling hunger.”

Seth also claims that making this effort and making these extra trips are worthwhile. He says, “I am happy to see how many people actually bring out food. When people came out to the New York City show, they stop to Whole Foods or Duane Reade on the way just to purchase extra food to help out with our efforts. They are going out the extra mile to help out a neighbor.”

In exchange for going the extra mile, Seth Glier charges only one can of food for concert admission on this tour!

Seth adds, “This tour is about providing hope and information; it is about inspiring fans to take action in their community. Although I know I can’t patch hunger in the world, I can do it for the communities I visit on this tour.”

“I’ve gotten to where I am today because of communities”

As I talked with Seth and listened to his answers, I started to wonder about what motivated him to give back to communities. He says:

“I’ve gotten to where I am today because of communities. The same three people that came to the Rockwood Music Hall for my performance last year came back to see me perform again this year. They also help spread the word about my performances in New York City to their friends and neighbors.

“I also enjoy returning to these communities and playing live music for them. For me, playing live is a great time and place to let go and share my personal stories and experiences with a group.”

Seth Glier at the Rockwood Music Hall 11/11/2011

“Whenever I share personal parts of my life on stage I feel that people hold it with them”

Seth’s need for sharing his life stories both in music and on stage is a fundamental part of his emotional process – one of the many factors that contribute to his song writing. Seth says, “Whenever I share personal parts of my life on stage [and through music] I feel that people hold it with them. My stories might be too personal for some, but for the right person on the right night, it can stay with them.”

That night, November 11th, 2011 at the Rockwood Music Hall, one of Seth’s stories definitely stayed with me; the story he shares in the song “No Place to Land.”

Seth tells his audience that he spends a lot of time away from home and when he returns, it’s like déjà vu – the feeling that he never really left. Although he is close to his parents and likes his childhood home, he also feels home is something you have to find and make alone. He says, “Home is a place of inspiration, not a destination.”

“No Place to Land” definitely resonates with me at the moment. I will soon look forward to starting a life somewhere in New York City. While I’ve spent some years away from home as a college student, I spent the last two years of my post-grad life at home. Now, I will begin the process of relocating in a new place once again.

Some of the inspirations behind Seth’s songs like “Too Hard to Hold the Moon” and “I Don’t Need You” are very personal and sometimes trying. Seth’s lyrics tell stories about growing up with a father that battled sobriety and a mother whose strength often overshadowed her compassion.

“I believe if you go too long without unveiling, you get a little wound up”

 Further in the interview, I wanted to know what Seth experiences when he shares his most personal stories in his songs. He describes this process of sharing as a purifying experience:

“I always feel lighter and more open. I believe if you go too long without performing or unveiling, you get a little wound up. The creative process for me might require a lot of preparation and careful thought, but the emotional process requires a lot of back and forth communication.”

Seth’s artfully constructed songs come from years of developed musicianship and dedication.

His guitarist, Ryan, grew up listening to Steve Ray Vaughn, Stevie Wonder and learning to play Motown, Soul and Rhythm and Blues. Meanwhile, Seth’s musical development started when he wrote his first song at the age of 13.

Seth developed a liking for classic song writers like Randy Newman, Billy Joel and Joni Mitchell, and he picked up the guitar and piano as musical tools that would help complete his lyrical compositions.

He also claims that learning more about music certainly helped him communicate better with people around him. It is no wonder Seth is such an intimate performer. Further, his openness and comfort in front of an audience makes the intimate concert experience a genuine one.

“I would love to play live for more people…and make a large performance seem just as intimate as the Rockwood Music Hall concert”

  I then asked Seth where he sees himself and Ryan in their career a few years down the line. Here is what he had to say:

“When people talk about a career, I feel like they’re referring to a list of checkpoints that have nothing to do with music or performing, like being on MTV. I would love to play live for more people. I would like to touch thousands of people a night and make a large performance, like one at Radio City Music Hall, seem just as intimate as the Rockwood Music Hall concert.

“I think there’s a place for intimate spaces in pop music – it’s not easy to create, but then again, most things never are.”

Stephie Coplan and the Pedestrians Take on the Music Industry

Stephie Coplan and the Pedestrians: A new band on the music scene

“We’re both addicted/ But their drug is meth and mine is the Simpsons/ ….’Cause where I’m from, when you’re mad at someone/ You don’t use knives,you go onto Twitter and ruin someone’s life…” 

These quirky and humorous lyrics come from the song “Take Me Back to the Suburbs” by the new and upcoming band, Stephie Coplan and the Pedestrians.

During my interview with Stephie Coplan, she explained, “I wrote this song last August (2010) when I started working for a non-profit in Newark. During my 20 minute commute between Penn Station and the non-profit, I continuously observed individuals whose lives were so much different from mine.

“Many of these individuals lived in poverty, had a disrupted education, and coexisted with crime on an everyday basis. Though these problems stared them in the face, they just accepted this as their reality and that there’s no way to overcome it. I couldn’t help but feel like everyone has just sort of given up – and this made me most sad.”

“Take Me Back to the Suburbs” is the first song I heard from Stephie Coplan and the Pedestrians when I researched the band. I initially learned about this band while making my CMJ concert schedule earlier this month. As I educated myself more about the band, I became so impressed with Stephie’s lyrical composition, vocals, and her piano playing, that I wanted to see her play live and potentially talk with her. So, I did, on Friday, October 21st at the Dominion.

During my first conversations with, Stephie Coplan, I noticed just how passionate she is about music and starting a full-time recording career. So naturally, I invited her to be the interview feature for Music Historian’s blog, Hear; Don’t Listen.

In this interview, Stephie answered my burning questions regarding her song writing and taught me that a serious musician should always remember the following three things: 1) Believe in yourself; 2) Practice; and 3) Don’t set overwhelming goals that you expect to accomplish by tomorrow.

Stephie grew up learning songs by some of Broadway’s most beloved like George Gershwin and Roger & Hammerstein. “Learning how to play seemed very much like a puzzle – one that did not involve English words, but music,” explained Stephie. 

Learning to play pieces and practicing enough to become a promising songwriter and performer, takes years of dedication. The decision of pursuing a professional recording career in the popular music industry though, is a complicated one – or at least I imagine. I then asked Stephie about her decision to pursue this career path: how did she know when it felt right? She explains:

“The desire to be a professional musician had been brewing in my mind for a long time, but I didn’t have the confidence to do it because I didn’t think I was good enough. 

Believe in Yourself: I started playing my songs for producers, … their response was I should be doing this full-time

“When I started performing in college up in Boston, I was in a toxic long-term relationship with someone who really enjoyed telling me how mediocre I was; and I believed him! After I finished college, I broke up with my boyfriend and moved to New Jersey. I really felt like it was my chance to start over, and I started playing my songs for producers, A&R people, and musicians. Their overwhelming response was that I should absolutely be doing this full-time.”

Stephie has been playing for audiences for quite a while. She participated in many classical music competitions and jazz ensembles as a high school student.

Although performing solo on piano and vocals was new for Stephie, her music background helped her overcome this obstacle early in her career. However; like every great musician, Stephie still had her challenges.

“First, it’s really hard to be creative and write all the music and lyrics, while being your own publicist, manager and booking agent. Yet, I feel very lucky that I have work; and it’s rewarding to know everything is going well with the band.

“Secondly, I struggle in balancing what I naturally want to write about with what the public wants to hear. The majority of popular artists are not writing about poverty in Newark, but pining about heartbreaks.”

During our conversation, Stephie admitted that when she was starting out, she often compared herself to other performers. While Stephie was a great instrumental performer, learning to play and practice with a band was new territory.

Practice: We became a band in March and started recording in May

“After I graduated college, I was being courted by a label in Hoboken, and the guy who wanted to sign me really wanted to put a band together.

“My manager and I auditioned people, and that is how I met my bassist, John. After the audition, John had to go away temporarily for a show in Louisiana. So I continued to work with the label.

“Then, things were not going so well with the label, and I eventually decided to hold auditions for a drummer by myself. When John returned from Louisiana in March, I had finally found the band’s new drummer, Shane. In May (2011), we started recording an album.”

 I was amazed to hear that a brand new band was able to not only tour, but to start recording an album in only two months. Several bands take a year to rehearse and perform before they start recording music. In Stephie’s case though, one artist knew what she wanted and knew how to search for the right band.

Stephie says, “When I auditioned drummers and bassists for the group, I knew exactly what I needed.

“Time and rhythm are my weaknesses, and I wanted a band that could really lay the beat down. Sometimes my excitement makes me rush in a song and stray away from the beat. John and Shane have an incredible sense of time, rhythm and grove, so they keep me in check!”

All musicians dream about making it big, but Stephie believes that the end goal of an established career comes from dividing that end goal into numerous little steps.

Don’t set overwhelming goals that you expect to accomplish by tomorrow

According to Stephie, it is really hard to be recognized in the industry without any recordings. By recognizing her challenges, she and the band have set their sights on releasing an EP by the end of this year.

Stephie says, “Everyone’s first question is “let me hear what you sound like” and I can only use words to describe it. So I’m hoping that with this upcoming EP, we can start doing some weekend touring though Boston, Portland, Washington, DC, Philly and Chapel Hill (North Carolina).

“We are also releasing a music video on November 19th for the song “Jerk,” announced Stephie. “We worked on this video with director David Dutton, who also directed “Internet Killed the Video star” for the Limousines.”

“Jerk” is also on Stephie Coplan and the Pedestrians’s debut EP called, “Nervous But Excited.” Brooklyn-based producer, Ben Gebert, is their album producer.

The album title appropriately describes where Stephie Coplan and the Pedestrians are in their career right now.

“Nervous but Excited: it’s definitely how we feel about releasing the album.” Stephie also hopes this album will take her band to the next career step: a year of full-time performances.

As of now, Stephie Copland and the Pedestrians are slowly making a name for themselves. They received recognition from the Hoboken Music Awards and have been nominated for the “People’s Choice” in new music. 

Stephie and her band have set their sights on a plan for a future in the industry. Stephie says:

“We’ve worked with a few managers in the past, and we learned that it is much better for the band to do all the publicity, marketing and managing until you find the RIGHT team; the one that really understands where you want to go, and understand you as people and musicians.”

Rarely have I ever heard a songwriter or performer talk about practice, confidence, persistence and thoughtful planning as tools for success. Very well, success means something different for different people; but for Stephie Coplan and the Pedestrians, it just might be taking on the music industry on step at a time.

CMJ Music Marathon 2011: NYC’s Cornucopia of “New Music”

College Music Journal Marathon, the largest and longest-running music industry event of its kind, dominated the performance scene in Manhattan and Brooklyn this past week. Up and coming bands on the independent music scene, were the focal point of this massive 5-day city-wide festival. CMJ traditionally attracts college students, young professionals from all walks of life and members of the music industry and press. As a young professional and a ringer in today’s “new music” scene, I was sucked into CMJ and now, I have a new happy concert memory.

Avi Wisnia: “Something New” at Rockwood Music Hall

(From left to right) Toru, Avi, and Gil

My CMJ celebration started at Rockwood Music Hall in New York City last Friday afternoon. I came to this rustic, cozy and bohemian bar to see Avi Wisnia – an artist from the independent record label, MPress Records. Although they’re a new band, Avi Wisnia blends musical elements common in older genres like the blues and 1950’s west-coast jazz. The song “Rabbit Hole” is an ode to the 12 bar blues style and American jazz.

The acoustic bassist, Gil Smuskowitz, opens “Rabbit Hole” with a syncopated melody; which is repeatedly improvised on both the piano and guitar throughout the entire song. “Rabbit Hole” also makes a great anthem for those cold and nippy autumn days. Avi sings you know it’s a good thing we’re in here it’s starting to pour/… we’re in these close quarters but somehow we’ll make due/ well it looks like I’m stuck in this rabbit hole with you.

This funny song of young and foolish love will warm your insides, especially when you’re consuming your favorite cocktail. On the other hand, “Something New” – the title track on the band’s newest album – is far more riveting and upbeat.

Audience at Rockwood Music Hall

“Something New” quotes 4 different songs: “Smooth Operator” (Sade); “Eleanor Rigby” (The Beatles), “I Will Survive” (Gloria Gaynor), and “Pumped-up Kicks” (Foster The People). “Something New” was the perfect ending to Avi Wisnia’s set. Everyone in the audience, including myself, was curious about the singer’s next improvisational surprise but before we all knew it, the song was over. “Something New” is the single on Avi Wisnia’s newest album, which is now available on iTunes.

Purity Ring Steals the Webster Hall Show

That night, I came to a larger performance space, NYU’s Webster Hall. Here, the experimental electronic group, Purity Ring opened the 7pm line up. Purity Ring’s sound is undefined; their songs chill me to the core. Though the band is a duo; they together created a performance of theatrical proportions. Singer, Megan James and sythesizer player and automator, Josh Kolenik stole the show.

Nobody in the audience ever saw James’s and Kolenik’s faces, only their silhouettes, which were outlined by flashes of colored lights. James and Kolenik purposely programmed these lights to flash along with the

Webster Hall reception for Purity Ring's show

down beats in their songs. In addition to an eccentric lighting effect, Purity Ring’s clever use of automated and synthesized rhythms and incomprehensible sounds in tracks like “Belispeak” and “Ungirthed” transcended listeners to a deep dark abyss of nonsensical musical ambiance. Purity Ring’s performance was out of this world!

Britain’s Emmy the Great hooks Brooklynites at Spike Hill

On Saturday, I took the L train to Bedford Avenue in Brooklyn to a pub called Spike Hill. Here, music video distributor, BaebleMusic lined up bands to perform throughout the day and evening. One of the first artists in the line-up included the up and coming singer-songwriting duo from England, Emmy the Great.

Emma Moss and Euan Hinshelwood tune up at Spike Hill

Emma-Lee Moss sings beautifully with a clear and crisp pronunciation. The one track in which she exhibits this vocal skill is “Paper Forest” – a song that celebrates living in the moment, whether it be joyful or somber. In this song’s last verse, Emma sings, Oh come and we will celebrate the things that make us real/ the things that break us open and the things that make us feel/ like these accidental meetings and the partings of our ways/ that are not so much our choice but in the blood that we are made… . Those who gathered at Spike Hill to hear Emmy the Great were hooked by Emma’s bold and poetic storytelling.

Spike Hill in Williamsburg, Brooklyn

Select 5-7 bands each day, and personally chat with them!

One can describe CMJ Marathon as a cornucopia of new music; but the abundance of bands and performance venues can be overwhelming for first timers. If you plan on attending the next CMJ, I suggest you research a few bands you’d really like to see and, if time permits, select 5-7 for each day. Unless you are Hermoine Granger from Harry Potter, there is no way you can attend every CMJ concert; so take your time in deciding!

I also discovered CMJ is an intimate festival where attendees are in close physical proximity of every band. In addition, bands are excited to talk about their music with attendees, and I can attest that every musician I met at CMJ was welcoming and open to conversation. I look forward to continuing my conversations with a few of them. I hope to learn as much as possible and I can’t wait to record and share these conversations with readers right here on Music Historian’s Hear; Don’t Listen.

Ava Luna: A Band in Transition

A band undergoes several transformations, hardships and disappointments before they gain recognition from music lovers and record producers. Brooklyn-based band, Ava Luna, is no exception. This band has persevered through some of the toughest and, sometimes, seemingly impassible obstacles and are now reaping the benefits. Front man, Carlos Hernandez has been with Ava Luna every step of the way. He enumerates on his experiences in this first full-length band feature article for Hear; Don’t Listen

“Hated to practice; but loved to write”

 Carlos started the band at 17 years old. Over the course of his music training, Carlos consistently trained in classical piano. Over the course of his training, Carlos learned he “hated to practice but loved to write.” This led to an interest and pursuit in piano composition. Carlos also developed an interest in rock and roll; and the band, Weezer became his favorite group. At 17 years of age, Carlos had a new passion and goal: writing music that people his age would listen to and love.

Along with his best friend at the time, Nathan, a synthesizer player, Carlos stared a band called Ava. In later years, the original band members adopted the second name, Luna, after they learned about another band also called Ava.

The band’s early fall-outs

In the early years, Ava Luna created three albums, all of which Carlos claims were “disasters.”

“Back when Ava Luna first started, people called it cabaret; somebody even described it as the Rocky Horror Picture show – something I definitely didn’t want to hear.” In his mind, Carlos perceived the band’s sound as something darker and with less pizazz. Comments like these shocked him.

In addition to the response from audiences; problems started brewing between Carlos and Nathan. The two original Ava Luna members ended their friendship once they both finished college. Afterward, Carlos decided to continue Ava Luna as a one-man band.

“How can I make this group sound?”

After the band broke-up, Carlos rethought a lot about what he wanted in a band. “I literally sat down one day and thought ‘how can I make a band with no people in it, and how can I make this group’s sound?’ If I wanted to have a future with this band, I had to define a clear sound. I thought about my musical background and asked myself how I could make a band that represents this and gives me the opportunity to compose and offset the soul music influence.”

(Left to Right) Carlos, Julian, Becca, Anna, and Felicia

Carlos also thought of how he could contribute instrumentally to the band, and picked up singing and guitar in addition to playing synthesizer. He also asked his younger brother to play drums. Eventually, Carlos decided to compose intricate vocal lines for multiple singers, and this led to inviting three back-up singers to the group. A drummer would soon follow, and Carlos’s old band mate and friend, Nathan, reunited with Ava Luna.

Ava Luna today is a “group of musicians that come together and combine their eclectic tastes”

Ava Luna is now a 6 person band. They managed to go on tour after only a year of performing.  And though they were still experimenting as a band, they received a greater response from audience members.

Carlos describes Ava Luna today as “the group of musicians that come together and combine their eclectic tastes.” Ava Luna might

Ava Luna perform at the Baseline Stage of the U.S. Open

have started as an experiment but over time, it became a long-lasting band in which everybody has a free say and the ability to play around with how ever much they want.

Carlos adds, “I can now understand what makes my band members like this music, and my job is to see how I can make everybody feel satisfied.”  Their latest performance at the U.S. Open in Flushing, Queens, New York proves this.

The group’s musical magnitude, dedicated and flawless performance stirred the most attention from the passing crowds that day. I was in the middle of that crowd photographing and video recording this band the entire time. I might have gotten the back of many people’s heads but the performance was worth every minute!

Recently, a record label invited Ava Luna to create a new album titled “Service LP.” They will also tour New England, Canada and some of the mid-west as an opening act for Toro Y Moi. Their first show is tonight at Webster Hall in New York City, and their last show is on September 25th in Minneapolis.

Greater opportunities and commitments also equates more complicated time and work management for the band. In my conversation with Carlos, I learned four of the band members have full-time jobs. They all try to make it to rehearsals 2-3 times a week and when they can’t, all singers and instrumentalists perform their parts in their own times. At rehearsals, Carlos conjures up ways he can synthesize rehearsals to temporarily fill the absent instrumentalist or singer.

“We have day jobs, but we play enough shows to support the band…It’s a lot of work”

Carlos also works several part-time jobs in order to make time for the band. On a normal day, Carlos communicates with the band members through constant emails concerning Ava Luna’s upcoming performances.

Becca, Felicia and Anna: Ava Luna's back-up singers

“We have day jobs, but we play enough shows to support the band; it is self sufficient. It is a lot of work,” concludes Carlos with conviction. Yet, Carlos wants to continue the group and further develop it professionally.

“When you step back and look at how far this band has come, it’s an accomplishment”

I asked Carlos where he would like to see Ava Luna a few years from now. One of his wishes is for Ava Luna to keep their sound without any compromises, or without changing their music in order to satisfy another major band’s musical taste. Carlos also says, “I want to see how far this can go. When you step back and look at how far this band has come, it’s a great accomplishment.”

Ava Luna’s mix of blues, soul, rhythm and blues, and folk in their songs, makes this independent group unlike any I’ve ever heard. I hope this band will go on more tours and make more albums. I finally asked Carlos what keeps him motivated to stay in the music business and he candidly replied, “It’s not a choice; this is just what I do.”