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by Baby Robot Media

Charleston City Paper believes that “what makes People’s Blues of Richmond estimable is its collective belief in the restorative powers of rock ‘n’ roll”

PBR - press photo people's blues of richmond baby robot Good Time Suicide

The first time was an accident: At a show in Knoxville a few years back, guitarist Tim Beavers’ Gibson SG crapped out on him halfway through the band’s second set, so he took it off and threw it face-down, breaking it in two pieces.

The last few times, the destruction was intentional. Just a few weekends ago at a festival in northern Virginia called Pasture Palooza, bassist Matthew Volkes smashed a TV with an axe. In late June at Mebane, N.C.’s The Big What? Festival, Beavers smashed a guitar. Not his SG again — this time a cheapo, $100 Squier Stratocaster, but the effect was no less visceral. Beavers destroyed another dollar-bin guitar at a hometown show in Richmond that weekend, too. READ MORE…

Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Charleston City Paper

by Baby Robot Media

Blackfoot Gypsies’s “I Don’t Know About You” featured as 102.9 The Buzz’s “Buzz Cut of the Week”

Blackfoot Gypsies are a two-piece rock band from Nashville, TN. Their music draws influence from blues, punk rock, southern rock,soul, americana and country. They are known for their DIY aesthetic and extensive touring. The band formed in 2010 as a two-piece of Matthew & Zachary. Past lineups have included Chris Denney of Denney and The Jets. The Blackfoot Gypsies have toured with White Fang, and Alabama Shakes. In 2013, the band headlined Muddy Roots Music Festival. READ MORE…

Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: 102.9 The Buzz

by Baby Robot Media

The Bay Bridged feature on City Tribe’s new record, the Tenderloin, and that Fleet Foxes comparison

City Tribe press photo Jacob Jones: Lead vocals, acoustic and electric guitars Eric Wallace: Electric bass, shaker Duncan Nielsen: Lead vocals, electric guitar, mandolin, korg Cody Rhodes baby robot media

On an improbably sunny Monday evening, City Tribe is seated in a semi-circle at a high-top table in Elite Café on Fillmore, knocking back a round of amber ales. Well, all except guitarist and singer Jacob Jones: He’s on his way, in what turns out to be an exhausting cab ride. Even with only three present, it’s already a challenge to tell them apart: so much facial hair.

As they settle in, drummer Cody Rhodes is chatting excitedly about two things: Café Elite’s art-deco ambiance, which he comments on a couple times, and the drummer that’s sitting down to his set at the front of the house, about to set the mood with a small jazz trio. They’re an enthusiastic bunch—surprisingly animated; disarmingly silly for a band that’s become known for mellow, acoustic-driven rock that almost always is described by beach metaphors. But now, just a few weeks shy of the release of their first full-length, Undertow, their ebullient nature as a band is starting to come to the surface. “Starting a writing process as a full band, immediately it’s going to have more rock to it,” says Rhodes. READ MORE…

Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: The Bay Bridged

by Baby Robot Media

Creative Loafing praises The Head’s performance in Georgia Shakespeare’s production of Tony Award-winning British satire, “One Man, Two Guvnors.”

The headCreative Loafing Atlanta today for The Head's performance in Georgia Shakespeare's production of Tony Award-winning British satire One Man Two Guvnors

Guvnors‘ most valuable players may be the Atlanta rock trio The Head, who perform a lively mini-concert before the opening curtain, playing short songs during the scene changes. All in their early 20s, the Head clearly specialize in songs of the era, including hits by the Who and the Beatles, and have the youth, costuming, and rockstar moves of the British invasion down pat.

The Head confidently play like a real band of the early 1960s, not a stage musical approximation, but their presence requires a trade-off. The transitional songs, however bright and peppy, can impede the story’s momentum in what’s not a short show to begin with. Should a silly farce really be almost as long as King Lear? Nevertheless, the Head contributes to a final number that brings a real sense of culmination and rock ‘n’ roll release to the show. The three band members, teamed with Muñoz, prove to be a real Fab Four. READ MORE…

Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Creative Loafing

by Baby Robot Media

Progarchy reviews Pillage & Plunder’s upcoming debut LP and premieres “I Will Drink the Ocean When I Go There”

Pillage & Plunder and Gokul Parasuram Hsiang-Ming Wen Noah Kess the show must go wrong baby robot media

If you have occasional fond thoughts of 90s art rock bands like the Monks of Doom you may also recall, while waxing nostalgic about the dear old 1990s, that there was a golden moment, after the commercial breakthrough of punk/grunge/indie rock in America but before the advent of Napster, when bands that had been toiling in musical nether regions for years finally had their moments in the sun.  The MoD were an offshoot of Camper Van Beethoven, the most palatably inventive American band of the 1980s and early 1990s, and like the great Camper Van approached American prog — delegated generally and unfortunately to the backwater of “jam” band categorization — with a firm belief that dumping every damn thing they could think of into the musical kettle and bringing it all to boil would work.  And it mostly did.  We’re talking about music that went deeply into the spirit of blues and other “ethnic” musics as processed through Roky Erickson, Captain Beefheart and, later, performance art bands like Butthole Surfers and the Flaming Lips, a twisted and distinctly American edge-of-the-frontier wildness that would make a great novel if Cormac McCarthy ever chose to write it.  In the pages of Progarchy I’ve before referenced the spectacular Metal Flake Mother out of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, who sailed these same waters and with the same ethic in the 90s, and my notion is that regionally there were many bands following a similar path, nodding to the blues, jazz, European folk, surf guitar, 50s lounge music, Tom Waits, and punk all at the same time, as if the real guitar heroes in the room were Django Reinhardt, Marc Ribot, Dick Dale, and Sonny Sharrock.  In the post-punk pre-internet age, these bands sold records, sometimes lots of records, and could sustain careers lasting, well, months.

Pillage and Plunder brought this short-lived and extremely satisfying era to life when I spun up their new record, The Show Must Go Wrong, for the first time.  Mixing an eclectic take on Belew-era Crimson with an Esquivel-via-Cake loungeyness, Pillage and Plunder map a journey that’s less highway than exit ramps, and across its 35 minutes The Show Must Go Wrong takes every possible detour, sightseeing on the outskirts of modern music.  The breathtakingly inventive “Beetlejuice” opens the record, with its furious and metallic nod to prime Oingo Boingo, and with “Boogeyman” the music maintains its carnival-esque darkness, backed by big riffs and chops.  “How Did It Come To This?” follows, and the album turns in mood, which got me to thinking that the precocious musicianship here on display presents a problem for Pillage and Plunder, though it’s not a bad problem to have: while the songs are composed and concise (a big plus), as an album The Show Must Go Wrong comes at times dangerously close to living up to its title, as it suffers at points from a lack of curatorial will in favor of showcasing musical dexterity, favoring breadth over depth.  So the promise of sideways-tilting, reach-deep, dark humor at the top of the album — and revisited in such songs as the excellent “Moocow” and “Nutcracker” — turns into an occasionally studied oddball-ness as the record unfolds.  But it’s a small complaint for the kind of record this is supposed to be, not to mention that the songs have a way of turning themselves into earworms that simply will not leave the head and hum alone.  Check for instance, “I Will Drink The Ocean When I Go There,” which premieres here on Progarchy: LISTEN HERE…

Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Progarchy

by Baby Robot Media

The Head featured in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution… catch them this month in Georgia Shakespeare’s production of Tony Award-winning play One Man, Two Guvnors

The Times-Picayune Baton Rouge The Head Mud and Water baby robot media

At 22, the members of Atlanta trio the Head might seem like unlikely candidates to play ’60s mod rockers in the vein of the Beatles. The group’s members — twin brothers Jack and Mike Shaw and their childhood friend Jacob Morrell — were born nearly three decades after the Beatles released their first album, 1963’s “Please Please Me.” READ MORE…

Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Atlanta Journal-Constitution

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