News + Reviews
The most exciting and important music news in New Jersey
The Return Of The Glassboro Craft Beer Fest
Ciconte’s Restaurant Group will present The Glassboro Craft Beer Festival in Gloucester County on September 27 from 1:00 to 5:00 at the Glassboro Town Square, 1 West High Street. GoodMan Fiske will provide the live Pop, Rock, Dance, Hip-Hop, R’n’B. Country and Oldies covers. Fifty+ breweries will serve almost 100 unique craft beers amid the food trucks, local craft vendors, non-alcoholic mocktails and regional wines.
Monte Maybe Is A ‘Jersey Devil’
Last year, on May 28, we asked if you heard of Monte yet? She goes by the name of Monte Maybe these days. The enigmatic Red Bank songstress, at the time, was dreaming about “Cowboys,” then bemoaning her age at “23.” Now, as part of her full-length Jersey Devil debut album, she’s a “Catalyst,” a fascinating music-maker who only has nice things to say about her producer, Deana Fielding.
The Modbeats Remember Frankie Avalon
In that odd netherworld of pre-Beatle rock history, when the original spark of rock’n’roll seemed dead, a vacuum was created. In the early ‘60s, Little Richard had joined the ministry. Chuck Berry was in jail. Elvis was in the Army. Buddy Holly was dead. The Everly Brothers went country. Jerry Lee Lewis was ostracized for marrying his 13-year old cousin. Up stepped some freshly scrubbed teen idols with paltry bubble-gum white-bread pop songs to fill the void. Fast-Forward 60+ years: The Modbeats.
End Of An Era: The Stanhope House Has Permanently Closed
There’s a sign inside The Stanhope House in Sussex County that reads “Since the beginning of man, the hours between dusk and dawn have belonged to the tellers of tales and the makers of music,” Stanhope House c. 1790. It had been a private home, a stagecoach stop, a general store, post office, tavern, rooming house and hotel but it took until the 1970s for it to become “The Last American Roadhouse,” as they billed themselves.
Jem Records to Release a Jersey-Centric Bowie Tribute
In 1974, Bruce Springsteen and David Bowie had a meeting in Philadelphia where Bowie was recording his ninth album, Young Americans. Bowie wound up covering two Bruce songs in the studio—“It’s Hard To Be A Saint In The City” and “Growin’ Up”—but both were given up on. Now it’s time for New Jersey to cover some Bowie.
The Bastard Offspring of Ska & Punk Resides In Essex County
They’re called Joker’s Republic. Their single, “Panic Panic Panic,” is but one of 12 tracks due this fall on their Punkerton Records debut, The Hand You’ve Been Dealt, produced by Roger Lima of Less Than Jake.
The Sensational Soul Cruisers Go ‘Deeper and Deeper’ On Debut Single After 31 Years
After performing on New Jersey stages since 1994, The Sensational Soul Cruisers have released their debut original single, “Deeper and Deeper,” on R’n’B label Banner Records out of Union County.
A Little Bit Of Havana in Paramus
Twelve miles away from the legendary Van Gelder Studios in Englewood Cliffs where many of the greatest albums in jazz history were recorded including those by Monk, Miles, ‘Trane and Diz, sits Trading 8s in Paramus. It’s where the new Circles In A Yellow Room (VOF Recordings), by the Mike Freeman ZonaVibe, was created.
New Woody Guthrie Album To Be Released
Woody At Home Volume #1 & #2, by the greatest folksinger of them all, Woody Guthrie, will be released August 14 by his estate. It contains 22 tracks (20 songs and two poems). Thirteen of the songs, up to now, have only been studied via his written lyrics. Now, historians and fans can hear, for the first time, Woody recording them at his Brooklyn apartment in 1951 and 1952.
West Orange Will Celebrate A Native Son, David Cassidy, Today & Tomorrow
The town of West Orange in Essex County will honor one of its Native Sons, David Cassidy, today and tomorrow. Cassidy died of liver failure in 2017 at the age of 67.
Black Sabbath’s First Stateside Concert was in New Jersey
The date was October 30, 1970. Black Sabbath toured the states for the first time and the first gig was in New Jersey at Glassboro State College (now Rowan University) in Gloucester County.
Biscuit Rouse To Honor Buddy Miles
Drummer-Guitarist-Producer-Singer-Songwriter-Rock Star Wild Man Buddy Miles [1947-2008] pioneered the concept of a rock’n’roll band with horns in Electric Flag before Chicago and before Blood Sweat & Tears. Drummer-Singer-Songwriter-Producer Biscuit Rouse, raised in Newark, a veteran of the bands of Lauryn Hill (East Orange) and Vernon Reid, had his debut album released just last year (Biscuit & Buddy). It will be released on vinyl this year.
Middlesex County Jazz Fest Is Free in September
The third annual Middlesex County FREE Jazz Festival will take place September 24 to 28 in four towns. It kicks off in in Parker Press Park on Rahway Avenue in Woodbridge September 24 at 7:00 p.m. with the Woodbridge High School Jazz Choir under the direction of Lisa Romero before Brass Queens will undoubtedly blow everybody away at 7:30 for an hour.
Leslie Gore’s 1963 Fem Anthem—“You Don’t Own Me”—Gets A Makeover
The Dollyrots from Florida, a punk trio, has added some balls to an already defiant song. Their version of Leslie Gore’s “You Don’t Own Me,” on Stevie Van Zandt’s Wicked Cool label, came out June 27 b/w an original, “Get On This Ride.” They’ll be playing both songs when their current tour wraps up in Atlantic City at the Anchor Rock Club.
Eric Roberson Gets ‘Over You Under You’ in New Single
“Over You Under You,” the second single from Eric Roberson’s 18th studio album, Beautifully All Over The Place, has been released. The album comes out tomorrow. Composer-Arranger-Educator-Producer-Vocalist Roberson, 48, is from Rahway in Union County.
Count Basie Center for the Arts Turns 100 next year
Over 300,000 people attend shows every year at the Count Basie Center for the Arts in Red Bank. Erected in 1926 as Reade’s Carlton for Vaudeville and Cinema, it now also houses the Vogel nightclub and the Grinn Arts Education Building, with an adjacent movie theater. Over 20,000 students annually learn there and at other locations.
Eric Sleeper is Losing His Mind
The Beautiful Lies of Eric Sleeper’s debut has him losing his mind. Indeed, the Morris County rocker, fearful of losing a relationship that has proven itself to be toxic, coupled with the hardships of a working musician, has resulted in his “Losing My Mind” single.
Connie Francis Dies at 87
One of America’s greatest voices, Newark’s Connie Francis, who sold upwards of 100 million records internationally, dominating the American charts in the late 1950s and early 1960s, died July 16 at 87.
Gloria Gaynor Still Surviving
One of the strongest female-empowering—and gay-empowering—anthems of all-time is easily Gloria Gaynor’s “I Will Survive.” It sounds as fresh and vital today as it did upon its 1978 release to shoot straight to #1, revitalize disco music, and add deep layers to her celebrity.
Everything Producer Jack Antonoff Touches Turns To Gold
In the old Greek myth of “King Midas and the Golden Touch,” Dionysus, The God of Revelry, grants the King the power to turn everything he touches into gold. Bergen County producer Jack Antonoff—he of the nine Grammy Awards and three years in a row as “Producer Of The Year”—has spun straw into gold with his knob-turning for Taylor Swift, Lana Del Ray and his own band Bleachers. Enter Texas singer-songwriter Maren Morris.