_MAYOR RAVI S. BHALLA AND THE CITY OF HOBOKEN, MONTY HALL AND WFMU
PRESENT_IN HONOR OF WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH:
MUSICIANS WHO ROCKED THE 80’S HOBOKEN SOUND
_Celebrating their Past, Present and Future
_
No one in HOBOKEN EVER TALKED ABOUT "the HOBOKEN SOUND.” That was a
term the media came up with to explain the extraordinary group of
MUSICIANS WHO FLOCKED TO THE MILE SQUARE CITY (and specifically
Maxwell's) in the early Eighties, looking for cheap rents and a
hospitable place to play. They came from as far away as Louisville,
Cleveland, and Winston-Salem, or from right up the block; and from the
beginning, WOMEN PLAYED AN IMPORTANT ROLE IN WHAT WAS HAPPENING THERE:
Karyn Kuhl, Alice Genese and Tia Palmisano from Gut Bank, Myrna
Macarian in Human Switchboard, Deena Shoskes in the Cucumbers, Janet
Wygal in The Individuals, Georgia Hubley (who'd form Yo La Tengo with
her boyfriend, Ira Kaplan,) Jane Scarpantoni and Donna Croughn of Tiny
Lights and so many more.
Their music was made and inspired by the Amer-indie rock scene and
made by friends and neighbors, influenced by each other, rather than
the outside world of top 40 radio and Arena rock.
Join us as we Celebrate their contributions to that “SOUND" and the
path that each of them took as they continue to make inspiring and
exciting music.
_Tickets are $15.00, doors open at 7:30pm
Featuring performances by:_
• KARYN KUHL BAND
• WYGALATOR _featuring_ JANET WYGAL _with special guest_ JANE
SCARPANTONI
• BRENDA SAUTER & friends: WILD CARNATION, THE FEELIES AND SPEED
THE PLOUGH.
• Long Neck
KARYN KUHL
Post-punk pioneer, Karyn Kuhl, was a founding member of acclaimed
HOBOKEN BANDS GUT BANK & Sexpod. She continues to blaze a trail as a
powerhouse, triple threat singer, songwriter, guitarist and leader of
the Karyn Kuhl Band.
BRENDA SAUTER
became a part of the HOBOKEN MUSIC SCENE IN 1983, after joining the
NJ-based band, The Trypes, as bassist. By 1984 she was playing with
other Trypes-related bands, such as Yung Wu, The Willies, and The
Feelies. She resided in HOBOKEN IN 1984. After The Feelies stopped
playing in 1991, she joined Speed the Plough (a band which was
originally comprised of some founding members of The Trypes), and she
joined Patricia Shaw to form a duo called Evaluna. In 1992 she met
drummer Chris O’Donovan and then guitarist Rich Barnes, and Wild
Carnation was formed. Anne Hopkins joined the band as keyboardist in
1999.
JANET WYGAL
is a songwriter, singer, and musician who has been playing indie rock
since before anyone called it indie rock. She is best known for her
work with the Individuals, the Wygals, Splendora, Wygalator, and for
writing and recording, with Splendora, the theme song for MTV's Daria.
JANE SCARPANTONI
is a classically trained American cello player who has played on a
number of alternative rock albums. She was a member of Hoboken, New
Jersey's Tiny Lights in the mid-'80s, then went on to play with other
musicians especially those associated with the Hoboken underground
rock scene of the 1980s and early 1990s, including Silverchair, Bruce
Springsteen, Sheryl Crow, Patti Smith, Richard Barone, R.E.M., Indigo
Girls, 10,000 Maniacs, Throwing Muses, Kristin Hersh, Lou Reed, Chris
Cacavas, Bob Mould, John Lurie's Lounge Lizards, Boo Trundle, Train
and many others.
ALSO, SPECIAL PERFORMANCE BY LONG NECK
LILY MASTRODIMOS has been recording songs as Long Neck since 2014,
first as a solo project while she was a member of Jawbreaker Reunion
and now as a fully realized rock band, with drums and electric guitars
and everything. Mastrodimos writes the kind of personal, introspective
songs that might be expected of someone who recorded her first album
“Heights” alone in her room with a single mic and an MBox. The
strength of her voice and her convictions lend Mastrodimos’s songs
an urgency and energy that is only amplified by the addition of, well,
amplifiers. As a full band, which now includes Kevin Kim, Alex
Mercuri, and John Ambrosio, Long Neck makes music that’s somewhere
between indie rock and pop punk--louder and faster than
Mastrodimos’s solo output, but no less thoughtful.
This program is made possible by a grant from The New Jersey State
Historical Commission, a Division of the Department of State and
administered by the Hudson County Office of Cultural and Heritage
Affairs, Thomas A. DeGise, Hudson County Executive and the Board of
Chosen Freeholders.
music
concerts
indie
punk
rock
culture
nightlife
2604
Views
24/03/2019 Last update