Glass Ghost, Flotilla, Jason Anthony Harris

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Wednesday, March 10th at Cake Shop

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Glass Ghost
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Glass Ghost is Eliot Krimsky on Vocals and Keyboards and Mike Johnson on Drums. They used to play together in 'Best of Boston' at community centers, clothing stores and for kids. Then they played together in 'Flying', and now in Glass Ghost. Their debut album, 'Idol Omen' will be out on Western Vinyl recordings on Oct 27.

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Glass Ghost is Eliot Krimsky on Vocals and Keyboards and Mike Johnson on Drums. They used to play together in 'Best of Boston' at community centers, clothing stores and for kids. Then they played together in 'Flying', and now in Glass Ghost. Their debut album, 'Idol Omen' will be out on Western Vinyl recordings on Oct 27.

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Flotilla
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Flotilla's latest album, "One Hundred Words for Water," has been hailed by Exclaim! magazine as "one of the most original and engaging albums released by a new Canadian group recently". In support of this album, Flotilla has toured nationally and played at festivals such as NXNE, Ladyfest and Evolve. They've also made New York City their second home in the past year, playing frequently in Mahattan and Brooklyn, including a showcase for Deli Magazine. "One Hundred Words for Water" was the 4th most-played independently released album of 2009 on Canadian community/campus radio (behind Rural Alberta Advantage, The Balconies, and In-Flight Safety).

Led by the pairing of Veronica Charnley, an intuitive melodist and guitarist, and Geof Holbrook, an Ivy-League-schooled contemporary classical composer, Flotilla makes for an unusual, genre-defying indie-rock outfit. The music has been compared to Kate Bush, Bell Orchestre, Portishead, and Joanna Newsom. Charnley's songs have been praised for their melodic inventiveness and vivid imagery -- the "half-stories" of the lyrics provoke and invite the listener to imagine their own scenarios. Geof Holbrook (who was a finalist in the CBC Evolutio [Read more]
Flotilla's latest album, "One Hundred Words for Water," has been hailed by Exclaim! magazine as "one of the most original and engaging albums released by a new Canadian group recently". In support of this album, Flotilla has toured nationally and played at festivals such as NXNE, Ladyfest and Evolve. They've also made New York City their second home in the past year, playing frequently in Mahattan and Brooklyn, including a showcase for Deli Magazine. "One Hundred Words for Water" was the 4th most-played independently released album of 2009 on Canadian community/campus radio (behind Rural Alberta Advantage, The Balconies, and In-Flight Safety).

Led by the pairing of Veronica Charnley, an intuitive melodist and guitarist, and Geof Holbrook, an Ivy-League-schooled contemporary classical composer, Flotilla makes for an unusual, genre-defying indie-rock outfit. The music has been compared to Kate Bush, Bell Orchestre, Portishead, and Joanna Newsom. Charnley's songs have been praised for their melodic inventiveness and vivid imagery -- the "half-stories" of the lyrics provoke and invite the listener to imagine their own scenarios. Geof Holbrook (who was a finalist in the CBC Evolution Competition) provides arrangements for harp, autoharp, horns, kalimba, organ, piano and electronics that have been hailed as complex and adventurous.

Flotilla has shared stages with Ohbijou, Ghost Bees, Jon-Rae and the River, Culture Reject, Pink Noise, Glass Ghost and as well, quite proudly, with weirdo acts Deep Dark United and 101 Crustaceans. In March 2009, they held a residency at The Banff Centre where they worked on new material inspired by the Rocky Mountains. With new friends they made at the Centre (including a cora player) they put together a concert that was recorded and broadcast by CBC.

The band will be part of the traveling Pitter Patter festival in May, and they are currently preparing to record their third full-length this summer, which will include more ambitious arrangements by Holbrook.


About One Hundred Words for Water:

To make One Hundred Words for Water, Flotilla rented out Studio Loco, which is directly above much-loved Montreal venue Casa del Popolo, for three weeks. They arrived with half of the songs half-written; but access to long hours in the studio made possible a spontaneous, organic approach to completing them. Producer and engineer Robert-Eric Gaskell set up camp with the band, which proceeded to take advantage of whatever instruments were lying around (French horn, trombone, Fender rhodes, kalimba, autoharp, a honky-tonk piano and a spinet organ someone's grandmother had left there). They practically lived off the sandwiches sold by Casa downstairs -- their favourite was called "Miel Madness". The recording process, like the sandwich, was at once maddening and sweet as honey.

The resulting album is White-Album-esque in its diversity. Operatic, eccentric, contemplative, raucous, harmonious, abstract and heartfelt are all applicable adjectives. All this is on display at their live shows, where the band performs the album (and a lot of new material already), very often expanding the palette with guest musicians from a variety of backgrounds.

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Jason Anthony Harris
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"A voice magnificent and morose, lost in a world of single being in performance." [Deli Magazine] After fronting various bands in New York over the past few years, including the instrumental rock band The Grand March, Jason Anthony Harris went solo with 2009's "A Record," an atmospheric & largely acoustic-based album. His low croon returned from a kind of hibernation, often only accompanied by the steady strum of an acoustic guitar.

Harris' current output has evolved and broadened in scope to create more percussive, layered and electronic pieces, sometimes completely improvised before an audience. His live experiments with found-objects, vocoder, radio noise, and loop manipulation have provided a new method for exploring themes once tackled with only guitar and voice. A recent performance found him beating and scraping a wooden chair across the stage to create a bed of dissonant clatter to chant over.

Harris is often accompanied by one of several musical accomplices, be it with hauntingly melodic piano, jagged saxophone, or inventive electric guitar. Members of Afuche, Flotilla, Girls In Trouble, Scurvy and Sactuaries contributed to his sophomore album,& [Read more]
"A voice magnificent and morose, lost in a world of single being in performance." [Deli Magazine] After fronting various bands in New York over the past few years, including the instrumental rock band The Grand March, Jason Anthony Harris went solo with 2009's "A Record," an atmospheric & largely acoustic-based album. His low croon returned from a kind of hibernation, often only accompanied by the steady strum of an acoustic guitar.

Harris' current output has evolved and broadened in scope to create more percussive, layered and electronic pieces, sometimes completely improvised before an audience. His live experiments with found-objects, vocoder, radio noise, and loop manipulation have provided a new method for exploring themes once tackled with only guitar and voice. A recent performance found him beating and scraping a wooden chair across the stage to create a bed of dissonant clatter to chant over.

Harris is often accompanied by one of several musical accomplices, be it with hauntingly melodic piano, jagged saxophone, or inventive electric guitar. Members of Afuche, Flotilla, Girls In Trouble, Scurvy and Sactuaries contributed to his sophomore album,"Under The Island," released April 2011.

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