Caveman with Caroline Kingsbury

Other

341 Delaware Avenue,Buffalo NY 14202

09 September, 2021

Description

Caveman with Caroline Kingsbury presented by DSP Shows ALL AGES Caveman Caroline Kingsbury DSP Shows presents Caveman at the 9th Ward at Babeville with Caroline Kingsbury Thursday, September 9 DSP Shows presents Caveman live in the 9th Ward at Babeville with Caroline Kingsbury 7pm Doors, 8pm Opener, 9pm Headliner Tickets: On Sale Fri. July 9 at 10am – General Admission Standing tickets, $15 advance, $18 day of show, can be purchased on Eventbrite, Babeville Box Office (M-F 11a-5p). Please Note: This event will be presented in accordance with applicable public health requirements and considerations as of the date of the event; which could include changes to capacity, attendance prerequisites, procedures, and other protective measures per government and venue policies. This may include proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 Test. Since Caveman began in 2010, they’ve released 3 full records, toured endlessly(sharing stages with The War on Drugs, Jeff Tweedy, and Weezer, and playing festivals including Coachella, Bonnaroo and Austin City Limits), receiving accolades from Pitchfork to the New York Times. Now in 2021, they’ve become one of the mainstays of the NYC music world. More than anything, Caveman are the band that everyone seems to know, who always seemed to be out on the town for years if you needed someone to meet up with late into the night, the throughline to a dozen disparate crowds of artists. Led by Matthew Iwanusa, lifelong city resident, with guitarist Jimmy Carbonetti (who grew up on Roosevelt Island) they quickly started their first band in high school. At 18, they met Jeff Berrall (bass) to complete the trio. Nowadays, they’ve grown from young punk kids into statesmen of sorts for NYC indie music. Jimmy’s Brooklyn shop The Guitar Shop NYC is a city institution and a clubhouse for the band. Practicing and working out of Williamsburg nightclub Baby’s Alright during it’s down hours, the band are just beginning to recreate the momentum of their early career after a period of false starts, legal issues and delays that slowed the release of their new record for several years. “Smash”is the first Caveman record since 2016’s“Otero War” and was produced by Nico Chiotellis at Rivington 66. It comes out on Fortune Tellers in July 2021. This Caroline Kingbury record is so close to a massive pop album, the kind you hear out on Republic Records with hundreds of thousands of dollars sunk into it so that it blasts out your speakers absolutely perfectly, the kind of inescapable music you hear taking over the airwaves and internet. And yet, it’s something else entirely. It’s the story of a young artist begging, borrowing and stealing to just get her voice heard, and of all the desperation and hard days cutting through. With each song you can actually hear a young kid who moved from Florida writing in her bedroom and starting out on her own in her cheap Hollywood apartment. You are right alongside her chasing those massive pop sounds, going to work day after day at the local grocery, and going on tour with a band for the first time. Feel her tenacity waver as she gets stuck in a sleazy contract, as her agent leaves her, and as her first serious relationship falls apart. The record lands in this strange place that is really like the sound of our own dreams. It takes you right there with her. It’s not so shiny, not so escapist anymore. Sometimes it’s really hard. Sometimes it’s broken. Sometimes dreams don’t come true but we keep trying. Entitled “Heaven’s Just a Flight,” it’s the story of a queer artist from a religious family coming out to the world, meeting her girlfriend, finding her people and her place. It’s the story of her older brother’s battle with cancer, his sudden passing just as she arrives home from her first national tour, just as she’s set to release her first single. The music is bursting at its seams. You feel her story, her experience. It’s the sound of a really big voice in a small world. It’s an amazing cross between Kate Bush, Cindy Lauper, The Cocteau Twins, and the Killers. It’s the type of music that soothes when real life is too much to handle. It’s good for driving around by yourself and dancing in front of the mirror. It’s the perfect music to imagine blasting at a nightclub even when you can’t. And it’s a double album. It’s enveloping and overwhelming on purpose. You get to hear every detail of this wonderful young artist’s mind and soul. Maybe because it feels so authentic, it will be time for that voice to cut through. Caveman Caroline Kingsbury

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