Wednesday, February 03, 2010


Rock N Roll Gas Station - February 4



Thursday, 10 pm, Sunday 7 pm - www.blowupradio.com
Monday, 1 and 8 pm, Tuesday 7 pm - www.thepenguinrocks.com

Buddy Holly - "Mailman Bring Me No More Blues"
The Big Bopper - "Walking Through My Dreams"
Wreckless Eric - "Crying Waiting Hoping"
The Paley Bros. with The Ramones - "C'mon Let's Go"
The Real Kids - "Rave On"
Los Campesinos - "There Are Listed Buildings"
Mini-Boone - "Cool Kids Cut Out The Heart Itself"
Black Wine - "Belong"
Crazy & The Brains - "Saturday Night Live!"
Jeffrey Lewis & Laura Marling - "Brain Damage"
The Lillingtons - "I Need Some Brain Damage"
My Son The Bum - "The RIAA Took My Computer Away"
The Living - "Play By The Rules"
PJ Bond - "You Too"
Sex Wing Starfighter - "Same Old Hope"
The Sheckies - "Better Than Star Wars"
The Negatones - "Carbon Freeze"
Alice Donut - "No More Room"
Anthrophobia - "Jesus Boom"

Monday, February 01, 2010



Hoboken For Haiti Unites Local Musicians For Good Cause



by Jim Testa
On Sunday, January 31, the City of Hoboken, WFMU, and the Guitar Bar helped promote two benefit concerts to aid the people of Haiti. They both took place at Maxwell's, the first in the afternoon for the younger set featuring childrens-music acts like The Fuzzy Lemons, Big Jeff, and the Garden Street Children's Choir.

In the evening, the grownups too over... well, sort of. One of the most impressive performers early in the evening was 'tween rock Jack Skuller, whose rocker dad has been appearing in Jersey Beat reviews since the 80's. Jack looks a bit like a younger Nick Jonas and sings like a mix of Buddy Holly and Ricky Nelson. He's got a smooth drummer who can swing, and that counts for a lot; most 15 year old drummers play like robots. Watch for Jack Skuller's debut single this April on Bar None Records.

Regulars from the Hoboken music community - and it really is more of a community than a scene these days - brought their best, from Dave Calamoneri's bluesy folk to Abbe River's chanteuse classic rock, to jaunty western swing from Smokey's Roundup, bedecked in cowboy regalia with a very low-key (but legendary nonetheless) Anton Fier on the drums.

A Brooklyn trio dressed in brown, with the flavorful name of Schocholautte (they also brought yummy chocolate chip cookies for a buck),started out as a pleasant but pretty typical Brooklyn indie pop combo until they cranked it to 11 on the final song and started flailing around stage like the vintage Who on a bad meth trip, bringing a psychedeliccally supercharged proceedings that this old-school concertgoer enjoyed quite a bit. If you wind indie gentility, you've always got Animal Collective. If you're looking for showmanship, tag along with me sometime.

The surprise of seeing Anton Fier at Maxwell at the same time as two Feelies was weird enough; then throw in a surprise appearance by gruff, unkempt, and grumpy-as-ever Bill Ryan, formerly of Hoboken's premier indie record store of the Eighties, Pier Platters, a being as legendary (and as rarely seen) in Hoboken these days as a Sasquatch. The Mayor of Hoboken showed up for a while, as did former reform mayoral candidate Tom Vincent. They didn't seem to speak any more than Fier and Mercer, but it says something that they were at least both at the same event.

Let's share some pictures, and then I'm going to hit you right between the eyes with a video.


Jack Skuller


Jack Skuller


Dave Calamoneri



Abbe Rivers




Smokey's Roundup (with Anton Fier)


Schocholautte


Schocholautte



Glenn Mercer and band



Jennifer Lampert



Jennifer Lampert