News + Reviews
The most exciting and important music news in New Jersey
The New Home of the Bruce Springsteen Center for American Music Will Open June 7
The Bruce Springsteen Center for American Music opens its new digs June 7 on the campus of Monmouth University in Long Branch. The massive 32,000 square foot structure includes exhibition galleries, research archives, immersive interactive experiences and a performance theater.
Bruce Joins Shane MacGowan Tribute Album
Singer-Songwriter Shane MacGowan [1957-2023] was the lead singer of Great Britain’s Celtic Punk Pogues. He wrote lyrics on the Irish immigrant experience and pulled no punches. Decades of booze and drugs killed him at 65. On November 13, 20th Century Paddy: The Songs of Shane MacGowan will be released with Pogues interpretations from Tom Waits, Steve Earle, The High Kings, Hozier & Jessie Buckley, Johnny Depp & Imelda May, The Jesus and Mary Chain, Dropkick Murphys, Glen Hansard, The Libertines, David Gray, Primal Scream, Kate Moss, Damien Dempsey, Moya Brennan, Amble, Camille O’Sullivan, Cronin, Garron Noone, Johnny Mac & the Faithful, Liam Ó Maonlaí, Lisa Moorish & Another Day, Lisa O’Neill, LYRA, Madra Salach, Mundy, Picture This, Pinch of Snuff, The Murder Capital, Bruce Springsteen and The Pogues themselves. Half of its royalties will benefit the Dublin Simon Community, an Irish homelessness organization.
Burn In Tweed Debuts With ‘Sunhouse’
The Somerset County trio known as Burn In Tweed has released its stirring “Sunhouse’ song wherein telescopes collapse, vampires flee and lovers tango while bassist Bex pumps out jaw-grinding lines of desperation, drummer Shane J. Dillon cracks those rimshots fit to tear a bloody hole in your neck, and vocalist-guitarist Ronny Day goes nuclear on this production from Andy Janowiak at Highlands Studio in Hunterdon County. According to their website, it’s “spikey sweet punky pop, steeped in metal and beats with a Turnpike heart.”
David Brigati Dies at 85
Born in Passaic and raised in Garfield, David Brigati rose to prominence singing lead on “Peppermint Twist” by Joey Dee & The Starliters. It hit #1 in 1961, knocking “The Twist,” by Chubby Checker, off the top spot. But by ’65, he quit the group, and was replaced by his younger brother Eddie. When Eddie quit the group to form his own, he took two Starliters with him—lead guitarist Gene Cornish and keyboardist Felix Cavaliere. They called themselves The Young Rascals.
Sebastian Bach To Replace Dee Snider In Twisted Sister
Canadian Sebastian Bach, 57, sang for Ocean County band Skid Row on its first three albums. Now he’ll sing for Bergen County band Twisted Sister. And he’s thrilled. He recently posted the following…
The Must-Hear Song Of The Week
“Me Vs. The Lack Of Context,” by Catch Me If You Can, mixed and mastered by John Baldassano, comes out today. This one-man alternative-acoustic punk-rock troubadour—born Ryan Hanratty—starts out with a Neil Young warble but—BOOM!—then the horns kick in like The Bar-Kays—Otis Redding’s back-up band back in the day--pushing and shoving the mix forward in a frenetic rock’n’roll brand of breakneck crazy.
Bike Routes Follow Up ‘Rush Of Energy’ with ‘Prairie’
We first told you about David Osterhout in the summer of ’24 when Blue Grape Music signed him as Bike Routes to release Rush Of Energy. Now comes Prairie with its “Delicate” video and he’ll be taking his act on the road starting this weekend in Philly.
The Feelies Plan Their Only 2 Shows of 2026
Has it really been a half-century since The Feelies came out of Passaic County? Hatched in 1976, The Feelies kick-started the ‘80s with Crazy Rhythms and solidified their legend with The Good Earth in 1986. In celebration of this achievement, they will be performing both albums in their entirety May 22 and 23 at White Eagle Hall in Jersey City.
Gary Lewis Is Still A Playboy
Millions of American boys formed bands after seeing The Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1964. One of them was Gary Lewis, son of superstar comedian-filmmaker Jerry Lewis, who watched from his Newark home. A year later, with no help whatsoever from his father (but a lot from his mother), his band, Gary Lewis & The Playboys, hit #1 with an Al Kooper song, “This Diamond Ring,” produced by Snuff Garrett [1938-2015]. Now 80, Gary Lewis is still a Playboy. His band is touring as part of the “My Generation” tour with new iterations of Lovin’ Spoonful and The Hollies.
John Pizzarelli Honors Tony Bennett
The Pizzarelli family of Paterson—guitarist Bucky [1926-2020], singer-songwriter-guitarist-producer John and bassist Martin—have always loved the legendary New Jersey Hall of Fame vocalist Tony Bennett from Englewood in Bergen County. Bucky—who was inducted into the NJHOF in 2011—played on Tony’s 1960 To My Wonderful One and 1969’s I’ve Gotta Be Me albums. John backed up Tony on guitar during numerous radio broadcasts and Tony returned the favor by drawing a beautiful portrait of him that now serves as the cover of John’s new Dear Mr. Bennett (Green Hill Music).
New Brunswick Jazz Project To Honor Kristin Field
She showed glimpses of the artist she’s proving to be while at North Hunterdon County High School in Clinton Township. Now Kristin Field, 21, will be honored March 10 by the New Brunswick Jazz Project as an “Emerging Artist” when she performs on alto sax, clarinet and flute while supported by tenor sax, trombone and baritone sax. When she graduates from Rutgers this spring, she says she wants—for her March 29 senior recital—to perform Dave Brubeck’s 1959 “Blue Rondo a la Turk,” John Coltrane’s 1961 “My Favorite Things,” Antonio Carlos Jobim’s 1964 “The Girl From Ipanema” plus two originals, all backed by piano/bass/drums.
The Goth-Folk of Mourning Coffee
Morristown singer-songwriter Christian Diana—who used to be in The Foxfires—is now Mourning Coffee. His acoustic loveliness is offset by an air of mystery in the grooves and, in the video for “Amor Fati,” humor. He sings in a whisper. It makes the listener lean forward to properly digest the sound of his own guitar, keyboards, synthesizer and vocals (with help from drummer Tommy Riley, violinist Julia Akito and mix-master Sam Staufi).
Blues Traveler Extends Tour
Last year, Blues Traveler celebrated the 30th anniversary of its Grammy-winning “Run-Around” hit with a huge tour. This year, the band originally from Princeton has added a slew of dates with Gin Blossoms, about which frontman John Popper says, “It’s rare when a package feels so much like home that it carries a spirit which becomes tangible to an audience. That was the case — by all accounts — regarding our summer tour last year with Spin Doctors and Gin Blossoms.”
We Need More ‘Random Acts of Kindness’
The Bergen County collective known as Random Acts of Kindness Music has released “I Wish” by Uganda’s African Children’s Choir. Ken Freirich wrote the lyrics and found the singers, musicians and producer in an effort to effectuate his vision of “having a positive impact on the world through meaningful lyrics, kindness and philanthropy,” according to his camp.
Jack Hoban is ‘Boardwalking’
Longtime Monmouth County singer-songwriter-guitarist Jack Hoban reached out to us recently to send us “Boardwalking,” a song about one of his favorite pastimes. "Aloha! I live in Sea Girt, but I'm in Hawaii right now recording my next album. There's a lot of beach music in my catalogue. Please listen and I hope it keeps you warm during this cold winter!"—Jack Hoban
The ‘Cosmic Trip’ of Sam Morrison
You’d be surprised at what’s coming out of New Jersey these days, specifically, in this case, Orange Music in West Orange where Sam Morrison’s Cosmic Trip was mixed. Morrison blew sax for Miles Davis in ’75 and ’76 before the legend’s self-imposed exile. His flute and originals graced two pioneering jazz-rock fusion albums in ’77 (Dune and Natural Layers).
Do You Dare Go To Darkside After Dark?
The New Jersey Convention Center in Edison will explode at 3:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. this Saturday, February 28 on “Satanic Panic Awareness Day” when Oddities Expo presents the Darkside After Dark Night Market with “the weird, the macabre and the beautifully unsettling” according to event promoter Trenton Punk Rock Flea Market.
Eric Sleeper is Pissed
Morris County’s Eric Sleeper sounds righteously pissed-off on his new single “What They Say.” Call it grunge. Call it post-punk. Call it instant-classic-rock. However you define it, the song’s buzzsaw guitars bring his point home with alarming accuracy. Last year, he was losing his mind. This year, his use of profanity might keep him off the radio but the dude’s real.
Bruce Tour Kicks Off March 31 In Minneapolis
"We are living through dark, disturbing and dangerous times, but do not despair — the cavalry is coming! Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band will be taking the stage this spring from Minneapolis to California to Texas to Washington, D.C. for the Land of Hope And Dreams American Tour. We will be rocking your town in celebration and in defense of America — American democracy, American freedom, our American Constitution and our sacred American dream — all of which are under attack by our wannabe king and his rogue government in Washington, D.C. Everyone, regardless of where you stand or what you believe in, is welcome — so come on out and join the United Free Republic of E Street Nation for an American spring of Rock 'n' Rebellion! I’ll see you there!"—Bruce Springsteen
Jersey Shore Hero James Deely Now One of ‘Nashville’s Finest’
On The Nashville Sessions (New Shot Records, Milan, Italy), Long Branch singer-songwriter James Deely pours his heart out on 10 songs (including a cover of the 1989 Garth Brooks song, “Much Too Young.”) He has some Major League help: Producer Doc Holiday (Doug Kershaw/Kentucky Headhunters/Herman’s Hermits), E Street Band bassist Garry Tallent, guitarist Roscoe Ambel (Steve Earle/Nils Lofgren/Joan Jett), Asbury Juke keyboardist Jeff Kazee and singer Layonne Holmes (Bon Jovi). Call it Hard Americana. Or Roots-Rock. Yet his balladry shines, like on “Nashville’s Finest.”