Author: Mike Cobb

Music

May the lobster fly again!

February 23rd, the band and I played our second show at the Flying Lobster, the coolest new venue in Carroll Gardens/Columbia Street waterfront. Essentially the backroom of Le Petite Crevette, it’s a highly attractive place with a brick and wood interior, tin ceilings, great food and wine, and a vintage jukebox stocked with jazz 78’s. The group that night went […]

Music

Jalopy Records release: ‘Fatboy Wilson & Old Viejo Bones’

Jalopy Records has recently released the debut album Fatboy Wilson & Old Viejo Bones. Samoa “Fatboy” Wilson and Ernesto “Lovercat” Gomez (aka Old Viejo Bones) are an acoustic duo who specialize in old-time, folk, Americana, blues, and more.  Wilson sings and plays baritone ukulele while Gomez sings and plays guitar and harmonica. The sound of this recording is true to […]

Music

Michael Hurley playing Union Pool Jan 15-17, by Mike Cobb

  Thanks to a friend, I recently discovered the music of Michael Hurley. To say I am late to the game is an understatement. Hurley has a prodigious career that spans more than 56 years and is highly prolific with over 21 albums released and three more in the works. At age 79 he is still going strong and will […]

Music

Concert review: Robyn Hitchcock at Murmrr

On November 21, Robyn Hitchcock performed two sets at Murmrr, a Brooklyn synagogue which periodically programs cutting-edge folk and rock. The show was originally meant to be a double bill with Tanya Donnelly (Throwing Muses, The Breeders, Belly) opening, but for reasons unclear, she was unable to appear. Though Donnelly was missed, fans of Hitchcock were able to enjoy even […]

Entertainment, Music, Nightlife

Only The Stones Remain

With a colorful career spanning more than 40 years, Robyn Hitchcock remains one of the world’s most idiosyncratic song writers. Born in Paddington, a neighborhood of London, in 1953, his father Raymond Hitchcock was a novelist, screenwriter, and cartoonist best known for his novel Percy. Robyn attended Trinity College at Cambridge but failed to graduate. However, it was here he […]

Music

A Brooklyn teen’s Appalachia

At 14 years of age, Nora Brown is a talented banjo player who sings ballads and traditional music with an interest in eastern Kentucky and Tennessee styles. She uses the clawhammer method of plucking and strumming with her thumb and fingers, resulting in a deep, muddy tone that lends an air of dark mystery and timeless depth to her playing. […]

Arts, Music

Psychedelic Country Folk Pioneers: Kacy & Clayton

Recently a song came on the radio that stopped me in my tracks. The singer’s arresting voice was at once soothing and eerie, not unlike Grace Slick’s part in “White Rabbit.” The vocals rested upon complex country blues guitar picking with a British sensibility reminiscent of Fairport Convention. All combined it gave me goosebumps. The tune was “Strange Country” by […]

Music

The Long Ryders – Pioneers of Alt Country

As part of LA’s Paisley Underground, The Long Ryders were one of the first American groups to combine the cosmic country of The Byrds with the DIY punk ethos of the early 1980’s. The band recorded their debut LP Native Sons with Henry Lewy who worked with The Flying Burrito Brothers on their legendary album Gilded Palace of Sin. Former […]