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Festival Coverage

Art of Cool Fest Lives Up to its Name

Durham, NC –
Urban music festivals have a tendency to descend upon their host cities and act
like a really bad flu bug. Every ounce of unused space is grabbed up by
corporate sponsors, and the flashy events, while cool for the foreign agents
that come in for the show, are a bane on the existence of the locals. Ask the
people of Austin, Texas what they think when SXSW starts. However, Durham,
North Carolina seems to have found the vaccination to the urban music festival
bug with Art of Cool Fest.

The event was hosted by the Art of
Cool Project, a local non-profit that aims to “present, promote, and preserve
jazz-influenced music,” and was held this past weekend from May 6-8. Some would scoff at a jazz-centric music festival as an
event reserved for people of a certain age, or just plain boring. AOC was quite
the opposite, with an assorted lineup ranging from big brass jazz to hip hop.

Not only was the artist lineup
artistically diverse, it was appealing to people of all ages, and had
formidable star power. Traditionalists could go see the Jim Ferris Trio, Hip-Hop Heads could go see Pete Rock at The
Art of Turntables
showcase, the younger crowd was treated to the likes of Anderson
.Paak
and The Internet, and everyone was graced with an
electric performance by Kendrick Lamar’s Grammy winning “secret weapon,” Thundercat.

AOC did a perfect job at
creating a lineup that brought people of different tastes together. It wasn’t
scary to try something new, which is a big problem at other urban festivals.
Sometimes as a badge or wristband holder, you’re faced with checking out an
obscure artist or missing out on one of your favorites. It’s profoundly
irresponsible to force these kinds of decisions on music nerds, but AOC made everything accessible. Lines weren’t that long at venues, and the impact
on Durham as a city was relatively non-invasive.

Another refreshing change of pace
about AOC was the absence of big industry presence. No “Universal Music
Presents…” or a “McDonald’s House of Jazz and Rap” type venue could be found in
Durham. When festivals do stuff like that it can be fun, but it takes away from
the event’s personality. AOC was all about chillin’ and enjoying really good
music, so multimillion dollar stages reserved for only the most famous of
artists would certainly have been out of place.

The day
parties were a major factor in keeping AOC’s vibe going throughout the weekend,
and put a deserved spotlight on local hip hop artists. One of the Friday day
parties was hosted by 97.5’s (and WKNC’s!) Mir.I.Am, and showcased local heat makers Will
Wildfire, Lil Bob Doe, and Defacto Thezpian. The most exciting day party of all
was JRowdy & The Night Shift’s Cypher University showcase on Saturday
afternoon. This party wasn’t just cool because JRowdy is an amazing lyricist,
but because the essence of the Cypher University movement is based on organic
collaboration and involvement. Anyone in attendance was welcome to join in on
the music and they did.  There were contributions
from some of the most talented local MCs like Tuscon and Konvo the Mutant,
singing from Will Wildfire, and even an unplanned contribution from Masego
wailing on his sax. To say it was epic, would be a gross understatement.

Art of Cool Fest was just cool in
general, and if you were in attendance you were pretty damn cool yourself. It
says a lot about the vibe of a festival when you can nonchalantly rub shoulders
with a Grammy Award winning producer like 9th Wonder, and just
exchange a casual, “wussup fam?” After this year’s immense success, it will be
interesting to see what comes of AOC Fest in the years to come. Will it remain
an unflappable collection of artists, enthusiasts, and media professionals? Or
will it succumb to big corporate temptations? Hopefully it will remain the
former.

– DJ Iron Mic

Categories
Festival Coverage

A Crash Course in Navigating Shakori Hills

With every six months comes another edition of Shakori Hills Grassroots Festival of Music & Dance. With the spring semester at NC State coming to a recent close, it is only fitting to put together a crash course in how to successfully navigate the muddy paths of future Shakori festivals! 

Lesson #1: Keep a map! Shakori is relatively big with multiple stages, a big dance tent, sprawling camping sites. Make sure to grab yourself a copy when you check in at the ticketing booths to make navigating between the stages efficient and stress free. There is constant fun to be had at Shakori and getting lost is just a big ol’ waste! 

Lesson #2: Expect to get dirty. There is mud. Lots and lots of mud. For some meteorological reason beyond my understanding, it seems to ALWAYS rain right before Shakori gets going. With hundreds of people trekking through the earth, things get dirty quite quickly. 

Lesson #3: Barefoot, boots or bust. There is no in between when it comes to what to put on your feet. With all the mud puddles, if you don’t want to get mud on your feet, the only way its to wear knee length, waterproof boots, rain boots do well here. But if you want to cut corners, you really can’t here. Wearing any other type of footwear will just leave you with mud in between your foot and shoe, you might as well rip the shoes off and get a some foot exfoliation au naturale. 

Lesson #4: Bring snacks! You will burn lots of calories running around between tents, dancing your booty off, setting up your sick camping site, etc. Don’t forget to feed yourself often, it’s easy to forget. Fuel your fun with extra snacks, I always bring a handful of protein bars and some fruit to keep me going. The food trucks are always amazing but for your average college student, a bit of a supplement is a must. 

Lesson #5: HYDRATE YO BODY. You are a big water bag and you shouldn’t let Shakori dry you up. Bring a reliable water bottle and acquaint yourself the water taps dispersed throughout the Shakori grounds. Coffee, alcohol and soda will dehydrate you, so with every non-water drink you have, try to compensate with twice as much water. 

Lesson #6: Have fun! Shakori is a weekend of unforgettable times with music and art loving people. Don’t be afraid to branch out and meet new people, your soul will thank you. 

This is DJ Sparrow hoping to see you at many Shakori Festivals to come! 

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Festival Coverage

Shakori Hills: Top 5 Picks

Shakori Hills GrassRoots Festival of Music & Dance is a semi-annual grassroots festival held in Pittsboro, N.C. The festival features a variety of music from bluegrass to indie pop as well as dance workshops and crafts; something for everyone can be found there. Despite its cold and rainy start, Shakori has lots to offer. Here are DJ Whatsherface’s five bands you won’t want to miss:

#5 – Big Fat Gap
Looking for some good Authentic N.C. bluegrass tunes? Big Fat Gap consists of guitar, mandolin, banjo, and bass. The lineup includes former members of Mipso and Mandolin Orange, making it a great band to check out.

#4 – Ellis Dyson and the Shambles
This band will undoubtedly have you dancing. Hailing from Chapel Hill, this folk band with an old time feel and jazz influences will rise your spirits and make you wish you knew how to swing dance.

#3 –

Rebekah Todd and the Odyssey

Rebekah Todd started her musical career as a solo folk/blues artist from the small NC town of Benson, and now plays in a five piece band. With raw folk instrumentals with a twinge of funk/jazz their unique sound is one to check out.

#2 – River Whyless
This indie folk band from Asheville will pull at your heart with emotional lyrics of self exploration and loss accompanied by beautiful vocal harmonies, strings and percussion.

#1 – Punch Brothers
This experimental bluegrass band from New York is definitely a festival favorite. Featuring mandolin, fiddle, banjo, bass, and guitar this band stands out from other bands with their unique sound incorporating classical and chamber music aspects into their songs.

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Festival Coverage

Phuzz Phest 2016 Review: Thee Oh Sees

Thee Oh Sees are classified as a garage rock band, but they incorporate other forms of rock such as psychedelic and post-rock. They hail from California, so it’s an honor to see them at Phuzz. Unlike many cookie-cutter rock bands, this one has two drummers who accent each other’s parts throughout their many head-banging songs. I actually didn’t realize this until the end when the crowd cleared, but it definitely makes sense with how they sounded. 

Bailey Park, an outdoor venue, housed this energetic bunch of musicians and their lo-fi singing. Perhaps my favorite part of the concert was three songs before they left the stage when the lead singer, John Dwyer, issued a disclaimer about their music. “There’s no toilet paper in the bathroom, so beware of this next one, dudes.” Following this statement, they played one of their shorter songs, but seamlessly transitioned into one of their longer one which took up the remaining 10 minutes they had on stage. As the minutes flew by, I thrashed my head and bounced around in the pit to the harpy-like singing and reverb guitar. I felt as though I had traveled to the Underworld and Thee Oh Sees were dragging me through the River Styx.

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Festival Coverage

Phuzz Phest 2016 Preview: Must Be The Holy Ghost

Must Be The Holy Ghost is the project of Winston-Salem’s own Jared Draughon. This is one of the artists I am most excited to see at Phuzz Phest, as MBTHG is best known for their fantastic live show. Draughon plays solo equipped with loop pedals and a drum machine to create songs that build up to a huge wall of sound rarely seen from a full band, let alone a solo performer. The live show also features visuals from a projectionist that displays colorful psychedelic patterns with color dyes on an old projector.

MBTHG is one of my favorite local artists from the Winston area and joins a great selection of North Carolina artists that are playing Phuzz Phest. I can’t wait to see the musical and visual display put on by Draughon in his local city among so many other great bands. 

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Festival Coverage

SXSW Day Party Recap

Last month I had the pleasure of traveling to Austin, TX and attending a few day parties at South by South West!

SXSW day parties are a series of unofficial shows put on by various sponsors during the festival. These showcases are great for those like me who were unable to purchase a music pass as they are open to the general public and free to attend. (much like Hopscotch music festival’s day parties).

Every business in the city of Austin seemed to get into the swing of the Festival from venues like Spider house, pizza places like 100 Pizzitas even people’s homes become venues for the week.

Although I only attended three days and I should mention couldn’t go to every show I desired because of my age, (I’d say this festival is not the most under drinking age friendly) I was able to see good range of artists and fall in love with that southern city.

Here’s a photographic overview of a few places I went, and artists I saw.

Alex G. A WKNC favorite, this Low-fi band never disappoints live. Among many other places they played at outdoor venue Space 24Twenty which was sponsored by Urban Outfitters.

City of The Sun. Probably the most magical and unexpected performance I attended while in Austin. I had known the acoustic post rock band would be in Austin for the festival, but was bummed the only shows I could find were for pass holders only. To my surprise while walking into downtown I found them busking under a bridge. 

Kississippi. I had no idea what “Eden House” was when I got the address for the Funeral sounds/Broken world media sponsored show only to find myself in someone’s cleared out living room to see the heartfelt indy-pop band among other artists. 

Happy Abandon. Got a taste of back home seeing this Chapel Hill Indy band in Austin. Playing at 100 Pizzitas a pizza shop whose view of Downtown Austin’s skyline was as beautiful as their melodic sound.

Netherfriends. This solo project by Shawn Rosenblatt as he explicitly describes as “blues trap” undoubtedly wins the most unsettling performance I have seen.. ever. With a combination of rude humor, crude dancing, and technical difficulties although I had previously enjoyed his recordings its a wonder how he landed shows at SXSW. 

Mother Falcon. These Austin natives put on their own showcase, “All the friends ball” where they invited bands from the area and nationally which they’ve developed relations with to play a day show at Spider house Cafe a beautiful outdoor venue, bar and restaurant. Although their set was cut short because of time restrictions this 15 piece orchestral folk band blew me away. 

And the Kids. This upbeat indie-pop trio from Massachusetts played at And the Friends ball showcase at Spiderhouse Ballroom along with a deer they claimed to have “rescued.”

– DJ Whatsherface

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Festival Coverage

Phuzz Phest 2016 Preview: Thee Oh Sees

Thee Oh Sees may have started as the name John Dwyer used to release some of his experimental home recordings, but since those humble beginnings TOS has evolved into so much more. Hooks drawing from punk, garage, and psychedelic influences will grab you by the ear and refuse to let go.

Perhaps one of their most defining features is how much material they have recorded. Their album Mutilator Defeated At Last was released last May and is their 16th studio album.

On a personal note, the first request I ever took while DJing on WKNC was for Thee Oh Sees. I was unfamiliar with them at the time but I have become an avid listener since then. The song was “If I Stay Too Long” off of 2011’s Castlemania. I can’t wait for their performance this Friday – it’s sure to be Phuzzy.

– Matt Brown, WKNC General Manager

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Festival Coverage

Hustling Backwards at SXSW

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6th Street in Austin, TX is the city’s main drag, with countless bars and quick food spots. Every single one of those bars has the ability to turn itself into a live music venue. During SXSW, a sizable portion of 6th is cut off from traffic, giving festival goers the ability to walk the streets freely. It’s wild, fun, and everything a festival goer would need to tell great stories when they get home. However, as Music Week comes to a close on Friday and Saturday, it turns into an open market for hopeful rappers, this year more than last. 

About a million people descend onto Austin, TX for SXSW each year, so it’s a no-brainer for unsigned or unknown artists to gather their entourage and make themselves known to potential followers. Most of those bars on 6th Street are available for booking unofficial SXSW showcases, which many artists take advantage of. 

That’s not the problem. I actually commend that type of persistence in artists.

The problem is there was a surprising amount of rappers who weren’t even booked for the unofficial shows, out on 6th, with their whole neighborhood flexing on everyone who walked by. They were either handing out free CDs, doing a little cypher, or standing around with big signs emblazoned with their stage names and pictures. What the f#*k are y’all doing? Seriously.

CDs are a dead medium, and 99.9% of people who get one handed to them throw them on the street when they get out of sight (the streets are literally covered in CDs). Not to mention, who is even carrying around a Discman anymore? If you’re handing out free CDs at an event like SX, you’re expecting drunk people from out of town to care about your music enough to bring it home with them and play it in their car. Probably not gonna happen fam. However, if you were lucky, click on this Noisey link. Maybe they reviewed one of your mixtapes.

On two occasions I walked past a crew not handing out CDs, but standing around with signs for a rapper. I was trying to read the social media handle associated with the artist they were promoting and got, “Yo whatchu starin’ at son?” Now I’m not a writer for Rolling Stone, or an A&R at Universal, but my title as the Urban Music Director at a well-known college radio station is definitely not something to shrug at. Actually, at a SX panel session about promoting music on college campuses, Frank DeCicco, Senior Director of College Marketing at Sony Music Entertainment, and Todd Goodwin, Vice President of College & Lifestyle Marketing at Universal Music Group, said that college stations are still the number 1… I’ll say it again, NUMBER 1 outlet that consumers use to find out about new artists. So the mean mugging street team literally told one of the very few people who could help them on 6th Street, not to stare at their advertisement. Sigh.

To the artists on 6th Street: All of this nonsense displays a below average hustle game. Pressing CDs in bulk is expensive. The only reason an artist should be pressing CDs is for promotional use, to be distributed to actual media outlets, and possibly selling them at your shows. Also, printing can get up to a few hundred dollars for large signs and posters that will end up being torn down by city sanitation hours after you leave. None of these promotional materials will translate into revenue for your brand.

With all that money spent, an artist could invest in hiring a real publicist, a legitimate promotion campaign, and a music badge for SXSW. Those would provide more than enough outreach to media outlets and listeners. Going to sessions alone at SX gives you a year’s worth of networking. Seriously, everyone you need to meet is there.

With all this said, rappers please put more thought into who you let represent your work, and don’t waste your time at SX; make it count. There are too many opportunities abound to be posted on the block in a city that you’re not even from. Isn’t that the life you’re trying to get away from anyway?

However I did see one exception… the dude in the above picture. He had all of 6th Street going crazy by setting up a PA system and doing a show out in the middle of the street. Good for you bruh. Then again, I couldn’t find out who he was from anyone, so there’s a lesson to be learned in that too. If anyone knows who he is, email me at underground@wknc.org because he was dope.

Categories
Festival Coverage

Moogfest Partners with Triangle Record Stores for Pop-up Parties – 3/26-4/21

All Day, Bull City, Carolina Soul and Schoolkids Records to Host Moogfest Artists, Listening Parties, Curated Collections and Festival Ticket Deals

(Durham, NC) – March 28 –

Moogfest is teaming with area record store institutions All Day RecordsCarolina Soul RecordsSchoolkids Records and Bull City Records to bring a unique slate of programming, ticket deals and curated collections to Triangle-area fans.

The series began on March 26 at All Day Records in Carrboro with a DJ set by Oli Isaacs and promotional giveaways. On March 31, Carolina Soul will host a listening party of Moogfest artists.

Moogfest will take part in Schoolkids Records massive Record Store Day celebration on April 16 with in store promos and activations at the store’s locations in Raleigh and Durham. The series concludes back in Durham at Bull City Records on April 21 with a very special DJ set by Nick Sanborn of Made of Oak and Sylvan Esso as well as other area DJ’s.

At all locations, students will have the opportunity to purchase $99 student tickets with valid student ID.

Dates & Locations

  • 3.26 – All Day Records – Carrboro, NC, 12-3pm
  • 3.31 – Carolina Soul – Durham, NC, 5-8pm
  • 4.16 – Schoolkids Records (Record Store Day Parties) – Durham & Raleigh, NC, 8am-8pm
  • 4.21 – Bull City Records – Durham, NC, 6pm-8pm

About Moogfest

Moogfest is the synthesis of music, art, and technology. Since 2004, Moogfest has brought together artists, futurist thinkers, inventors, entrepreneurs, designers, engineers, scientists, and musicians. By day, Moogfest is a platform for conversation and experimentation. This mind-expanding conference attracts creative and technology enthusiasts for three days of participatory programming in Durham, North Carolina. By night, Moogfest presents cutting-edge music in venues throughout the city. Performing artists include early pioneers in electronic music, alongside pop and avant-garde experimentalists of today.

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Festival Coverage

Michelle Obama’s “Let Girls Learn” Speech at SXSW

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AUSTIN, TX – Days after President Obama came to Texas to speak at the tech portion of SXSW, Michelle Obama, accompanied by a panel of female superstars led by Queen Latifah, rapper Missy Elliot, songwriter Diane Warren, and actress Sophia Bush; spoke as the keynote to kickoff SXSW Music Week, Wednesday morning.

The focus of Obama’s speech was on her “Let Girls Learn” initiative, a program that aims to help improve education quality for the 62 million girls around the world who aren’t in school for various reasons. The panel also spoke about the new single that was recorded to promote Let Girls Learn, “This is For My Girls,” featuring Zendaya, Kelly Rowland, Lea Michele, Kelly Clarkson, Janelle Monae, and recent Parkwood Entertainment signees Chloe and Halle.

All of the panelists spoke about their experiences as women who never gave up on their goals, but emphasized that men and women should be allies in the effort to help women around the world. “There are a lot of ‘men only’ tables out there,” said Obama, “and if you want to strengthen your organization you have to bring women to the table as well.”

Obama cited economic reasons such as, countries with a larger population of educated women having stronger GDPs; and Queen Latifah pointed out that when women are able to be included in the professional workspace, it creates the ability to handle issues from a broader perspective.

Being that it was a music conference, the ladies also spoke about the artists they listened to growing up. Queen Latifah gave the most detailed response, talking about her experiences as the only girl in her crew as a young rapper and how that was a good experience for her because there was no sexism, just collaboration.

The First Lady wrapped up her speech with a couple questions from the audience, one of which created quite a stir. She was asked whether or not she would run for President. She unfortunately declined the possibility, stating that she’s had a wholesome experience as First Lady, and that it wouldn’t be fair for her family, especially her two daughters that are entering young adulthood. However, she did admit that she’ll miss being in the White House, and that she’ll miss helping and working with young people.

In a political climate where the loudest opinions always seem to be passionately against the Obamas, the First Lady’s discussion in Austin was in front of a friendly crowd that most likely wouldn’t exist outside of the city’s limits. She seemed relaxed and at home, which is fitting for a conference like SXSW where work and fun intersect every day, and stood as a perfect way to usher in the greatest music festival of the year.

-DJ Iron Mic

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