Stroamata by E

What brought the band together?

Alex Markowitz: We all met in college and we all have a drive to make music and perform. We are all people who have an insatiable appetite to make music, and we found each other.

Which artists or bands have influenced you, individually or as a band?

This is always an impossible question. We listen to and love all types of music and we love going to live shows and seeing a band really tear a house down. At the same time, we love electronic music and watching a DJ make the crowd move! It's impossible to list off just one band and one show and, truthfully, we think it is best to soak it all in. 

Any tracks you've got on repeat now?

Run The Jewels.

What words would you use to define your sound?

'Future Rock' is what we like to say. Not because it sounds like it is from the future but, instead, it is not based on nostalgia. We want our music to be influenced by the world we want to see in the future and not reach out to times passed.

Could you tell us a bit more about your forthcoming album?

We are trying to marry good songwriting and experimental production. Somewhere along the way these two things became exclusive when, at one time, they were joined at the hip. Now, we want to mix it up again in a new way, and a way that is uniquely Stroamata.

Is there a track from the album you're most excited to share with listeners?

Impossible question, yet again. They are all our babies and it's so hard to single out just one.

What do you hope listeners can take away from your music?

We hope they make a true emotional connection to the music. We hope it makes them feel things, remember things, and get lost in their own thoughts.

Is there anything you'd like to add?

Making music is a way of life and making music is fun. It also enriches and teaches us, making us more complete people. We hope you enjoy what we do as much as we enjoy doing it.

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VHS Collection by E

What brought the band together?

James Bohannon: Conor and I went to grade school together in New York. We grew up together, went to middle school together, so we've known each other since kindergarten and just played music as kids on acoustics growing up and things like that. Nils and I, we met in high school. We went to high school together and we were in a band together in high school and worked on some recorded music there and played live shows and things like that.

Why call yourselves VHS Collection?

Basically, we wanted to choose a name that was representative of our sound and our generation: we figured with the VHS medium, we're the last generation to really know and appreciate it. We all grew up with VHS tapes, you know, having VHS collections and you go to someone's old country house or something and they have a ton of old VHS tapes; that was just kind of what we grew up on to watch movies, and so that was a fitting name for us. We figure, even generations behind us, people a little bit younger, they won't even know what VHSes are and they were such an integral part of our childhood and growing up, so we felt that name was appropriate. And we like the 'collection' element, like, collection of different themes and things like that, so that's how the name came.

Who are you musical influences, individually or as a band?

Individually, I think a lot of Talking Heads, LCD Soundsystem, Modest Mouse, Phoenix, M83, St. Lucia a lot, The National, yeah, that's probably a good start [laughs].

What's in your playlist right now?

I'm listening to a Spotify playlist which is starting off with The National. So, I'm listening to a lot of Sea Wolf, The National, St. Lucia, Phoenix; Dr. Dog, I'm really into.

What was the inspiration behind your single, "Lean"?

"Lean" was kind of inspired by growing up - just a coming of age tune - growing up in the city and how much you end up relying on your friends. Your family is always there for you but, really, your friends are there on a day to day, they help you tackle the obstacles of the day, kind of wade through the things of growing up, so that was what it was really about: an ode to the friend. There's a lot of stories in there and references about places in New York and what friends are doing and things like that. Just a growing up, coming of age song, and the importance of friends as a role and a support system.

How would you define your sound?

Our sound as a whole is kind of a mix between a synth-y pop sound with kind of a rock backdrop, and then obviously a very narrative focus, vocal element. My singing is very character based - there's a lot of drama and character in the singing style - so it's taking some of those elements and putting it on top of a synth-y rock background, which isn't done too much; a lot of times in synth or electronic music it's kind of an inhuman singing style, so we wanted to kind of mix those elements. I think that's a good description.

Could you describe your EP?

I would say we wanted to always be focused on more. Because it's an EP, there's only three songs, but we wanted to show the dynamic of the three singles. I mean, they're a very different three singles. We wanted to show the variety of the type of music we have; "Lean" which is a very synth-y, pop-y, psychedelic song; and then there's "Late Night" which is a much darker, dance-y, more intense song; and then there's "Far Hills Cider" which is kind of just straight pop, a pop-y chorus. So, we wanted to kind of go on both sides of the spectrum, with "Lean" probably being in the middle, which is why we featured it as a single.

You're performing at Rough Trade in BK Friday and heading out on tour in 2016, do you have a favorite track to perform live?

I would say we love playing "Late Night" live. It just comes off really well, it's really smooth, it's kind of a good sing-along, so I'd say "Late Night" is one of our favorite songs to play live. The synth gets people dancing.

What do you hope listeners are able to take away from your music?

Really, just we want people to take away the lyrics and the message of the song: a nice mix of always pop-y choruses but with kind of a little bit darker undertones. And just, hope people have fun with them, enjoy them, hopefully they can spur a memory or some sort of déjà vu or feeling.

Is there anything you'd like to add?

This EP was just a small glimpse of our catalogue. We're really excited to put out our full album in probably the next 7 or 8 months and we're looking forward to being able to be a little more expressive in that, show a little more depth, a larger variety, and really get a little more experimental with the full record, whereas the EP is just a snapshot of three singles.

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The Insurrectionists by E

What got you interested in music?

Casey K: That is hard to say. A lot of people grew up in a house where there was only music but I didn't, there was very little music. The defining moment was when - I kind of figured everything out on my own, musically, so I didn't grow up listening to The Beatles, I kind of discovered stuff along the way - the first band that I really connected with when I was super young was Green Day. I was at a friend's house and we were watching their music videos and, of course, I was a fanatic so I'd seen all of them ten ways to the sun, and I was showing them to him and we were watching the video for this song "Waiting" and there was a close-up of him playing the guitar and I was like, 'hang on, what's different about him, why can he play guitar and I can't?'. I was like, 'I can do that, I just need to get a guitar and then I could learn how to play these songs,' and then something clicked and then I was like, 'wait, I could write my own songs'. So, it was just this definitive moment at 9, 10 years old I was like, well, that's what I'm going to do for the rest of my life and, here I am.

Do you have a favorite Green Day song?

Green Day is definitely not my favorite band anymore, they were just the first thing where I was like, this is fast and this is cool and, honestly, I didn't understand much about punk, at all - or music really - so they were kind of just there. It was right when American Idiot came out, but my favorite Green Day song I think would probably still be "Waiting", just because of the sentiment that goes along with it.

Which artists and bands are you influenced by?

When I was 11 or 12 my mom got me an iPod for Christmas and it was one of those things that I didn't ask for, it was never even a thought, and it was the biggest one they had at the time, like 30 GB. Of course, I had no music, we didn't really have a computer, we had a crappy one that my dad left behind, but we didn't have anything good. So, we went to my uncle's house - my uncle was kind of the hip, cool uncle - so he flipped up his iTunes and he scrolled through and he was like, 'what about The Beatles,' and I would be like, 'I don't know,' and he'd be like, 'yeah, you want Beatles,' and so he loaded up my iPod with all this stuff that I'd never heard. Over the next three years it was like, I'd be on the bus going to school and I could scroll the wheel and stumble upon something that would change my life, just 'cause it was all right there waiting.

I remember the next band that I really got into was Red Hot Chili Peppers. My uncle gave me all their music because I didn't really have the means to get all of their music otherwise because you couldn't pirate it - pirating's bad, don't do that - but you couldn't pirate it, I certainly couldn't download anything, so having that music all there was really the catalyst for discovering stuff. So, Red Hot Chili Peppers was next, I mean, I'm scratching my head with an arm that has their tattoo on it, so they're pretty influential, I would say. Then, after that, of course Nirvana and Smashing Pumpkins - I would say Smashing Pumpkins is probably the overall, arcing, greatest influence - and then Radiohead. It's not like these are underground bands at all, but definitely I'm like, 'how do they do that?' and then I try to do that and it doesn't really work that well, but I try.

Who's your favorite artist of the moment?

I am a fan of a gentleman named Will Toledo who is a few years older than me, he is in a band called Car Seat Headrest. I came across him by accident on Bandcamp about a year ago and I was blown away. It was totally lo-fi, recorded in a basement like I've been doing for years, and so it sounded like absolute crap, but there was just something, I was like, 'wow, this kid's got a really cool way of looking at things and this kid's going places,' so I emailed him and we were talking back and forth and, flash forward a year, and at the end of August they announced that they're signing to Matador Records and this and that and they just put out an album called Teens of Style. It's kind of weird because it's like the first person I knew who's in this limelight roll; I would say that I've been closely following him and his rise.

How would you describe your sound?

I always saw alternative when anybody asks, because that gives me the freedom to do whatever I want and I'm not going to get pigeonholed, I can do something different. It would be like, if Green Day put out anything electronic tomorrow, it'd be like, why are you doing that? So, I can pretty much do whatever I want, and I think on this album I have covered enough ground that anything I do in the future is not going to be that crazy, because there's stuff that's heavily electronic and then there's stuff that's kind of acoustic-y and then there's stuff that's pretty heavy and there's everything in between. I would say that it's basically all styles of music - because I'm never trying to fit into one thing - but everything is done with a rock sensibility. So with the song structure and the way I write words, I'm not writing about being in a club, I'm not writing about having too much money, going to have to set it on fire, I'm writing about things that are real to me and, I think, real to a lot of people, so there's that rock alternative sensibility in the lyrics and then in the song structure that then is applied to any palate that I want, basically. So, alternative, [laughs] which I know doesn't narrow anything down, that's the best way to put it.

Could you sum up the album in one sentence?

I think the one sentence that I would sum it up with would be the title, which is I Gave You the Moon But You Wanted the Stars; nothing is ever enough.

What inspired your single, "The Boy With the Thousand-Mile Stare"?

I take a lot of stuff from books and movies and TV shows and stuff people say, friends and things like that, and I'm very open to the fact that - unless you live in a cabin in the woods and you're isolated - you're not completely unique, you're not independent of the world around you. Some people like to pretend that they were born in this big bang, separate from everything else, and they're kind of in their own world, but I'm very open to the fact that there's plenty of art around and I think your job is to kind of take from that and figure out your own meaning in everything. So, I take pretty liberally from other things - not, like, plagiarize - but I'll read a line somewhere and I'll be like, 'wow, that's cool,' and I'll find a way to apply that idea.

So, the book was A Hologram For The King by Dave Eggers and there was a little passage about the main character - he's not a failure, but he's disappointed his kids and he's middle age, mid-life crisis - and he was having a flashback talking about how he was at a high school reunion and he, I guess, walked up to somebody and the person described him as having a thousand mile stare, like he was always kind of looking somewhere else. I had just never heard it phrased like that and so I wrote it down and I immediately reworded it as 'the boy with the thousand mile stare'.

Like, two months later I just felt like saying something one night and I was like, 'I want a song that says this,' and I just kind of felt, where I was, it reminded me of the Avril Lavigne cover for the album Let Go, where she's standing in the street and everyone's zipping around her. I was like, that's how I freaking feel, man, everything is flying around me, everybody else is in labs discovering cures for cancers and people I went to high school with are doing this and that, and I'm like, yeah, I work in a kitchen and make music, what does that mean? So, it's kind of just me traveling down that line of thought and the name just seemed like a perfect fit; I was like, that's me, I'm always, kind of, wishing I was somewhere else.  

What do you hope listeners are able to take away from your music?

One, the old cliché , you're not alone, but I think that's really true. Some of your favorite music is probably your favorite music because you're listening to it and, maybe it's Coldplay, with a song like "Fix You", and what he's saying resonates with you and, in a basic human sense, it makes you feel like, okay, there's someone else out there like that. Obviously, Chris Martin is a much more handsome, well-off, fortunate man than I am, but he still has these fears and these worries and these concerns and he still wants to do right.

So, I think that my M.O. has always been, one, to kind of give a voice and give words to things that maybe other people can't, because - I don't want to say that I'm great at doing that because I'm not wildly successful, yet - but I think I have a way with putting words to stuff that other people can't. Just, give a voice to the voiceless type of thing. Two, it's not like I'm out here in the Peace Corp - this isn't a heal the world type of thing - there's always selfish motives and I think, for me, it's just to take everything that I've experienced and gone through and, rather than - like my father and his father before him - rather than turn it into negativity and anger and hate, to try to take everything shitty and find the silver lining and find a way to make something out of that and leave something behind, rather than leave people behind.

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The Romantic Era by E

What brought you all together?

Connor: Ben and I - Ben is the drummer - we were in jazz band together in highschool and we ended up starting this project together, The Romantic Era. We wanted to make this big pop group and envisioned a bunch of different singers and stuff so, over the years, we accumulated local talent and things like that to try and accomplish that and we finally, in the past couple years, really got that going with the four singers and the band members. Along the way we got members from playing football together with some guys in college and we actually found Christa - she's a bit younger than we are, but she went to the same highschool as we did. So, it took us a bit, but we finally got what we were looking for.

Why choose the name The Romantic Era?

Connor: Ben was in an Intro to Music course and they were learning about the different periods of music and had heard the name and just thought it was kind of a cool name, it'd be cool for a group, just because it had 'romantic' in it. We really liked what it stood for; it was kind of a period of creativity, where individuality was definitely cherished in the arts, at that point, and originality came out as something that was very important then, so that kind of stuck with us and we just thought it was fitting that it was an 'era', being that it is such a big group.

With such a large group, how does your songwriting process work?

Christa: We work very collaboratively, we just start with either someone comes up with a lyric that we really like or we just go with a beat or a hook or whatever it is, and then we just play off of that. Everyone just puts in their own ideas and we're in the studio bouncing ideas around off each other and then it just ends up growing into this song. So, we can start with something really, really simple, and then we just end up adding a bunch of stuff and we all just pool our different ideas. It's definitely a collaborative effort, there's no one person that really writes, it's all of us putting all of our ideas and our different creativity into the songwriting process. I think that's why our songs end up coming out so different than a lot of things that you hear, because there are so many different perspectives that are being pulled together into one song.

Connor: It's definitely a different vibe, having so many members. We can start, like Christa said, with just keys and the vocalist and we get a totally different song than we would if we go in the studio and have our keyboardist and drummer make an instrumental and then write to that. Just having those different perspectives and different personalities adds to the persona of what the song comes out to be.

Who would you say your musical inspirations are, individually or as a collective?

Connor: I don't know if we have any collective ones, everyone kind of has their own different past. I know, Ben's really into hardcore, Parris is really into hip hop, Christa, I don't even know what you're into.

Christa: Everything [laughs].

Connor: Yeah, I definitely had a huge influence more from performers, I was really into Michael Jackson, Freddie Mercury, David Bowie; I like that era of performers. Then, I grew up really loving bands like The Used, Panic! At The Disco, Taking Back Sunday, because they were just so energetic in their live performances and even on record, but definitely, not as a band, I don't think that we can all have a cohesive one when we have this many tastes, I guess.

What's in your playlists now?

Connor: Oh, in my playlist now, man, I'm really digging Bieber's new album. I hate to say it, but I love it.

Christa: I don't hate to say it, I'm embracing it [laughs]. I love it, it's really good.

Connor: [Laughs] Yeah, he's killing, I'm really digging his stuff, Ed Sheeran's stuff, I just like him as a writer.

Christa: I've been really obsessed with Ariana Grande, definitely. That just might be the girl in me coming out, but I've been loving her.

How would you describe your sound?

Christa: It's hard to put into one genre, I guess.

Connor: We definitely do make pop music and that's, like, the basis of it, but it's definitely a fusion sound. I like to say electric pop, because it's like pop on steroids, like The Black Eyed Peas meets EDM or something. We always try to translate what we do in our live show to record and to get that really energetic feel and electric feel to it, but maintain a center around a pop vocal.

What was the inspiration for your single "Wasted Love"?

Connor: Man, "Wasted Love" is just one of those relationships that I think a lot of us experienced in the group - and I think a lot people have experienced - that's kind of toxic but you're still drawn to it. It's like love that's like an alcohol or a drug, that you get this huge euphoric feeling off of, but then it leaves you drained, totally, physically and emotionally. So, I think it's just something that a lot of us in the group had experienced so we set off lyrically that way and tried to allow the melodies and the beats to translate that whole meaning of what we wanted to say.

Christa: I think a lot of people have gone through a situation like that, so it makes it relatable for our listeners. The lyrics really tell a story that people can say, 'oh yeah, I can relate to that,' so it's more incorporated with the listeners, too.

Have you been working towards a new album or EP?

Connor: Yeah, definitely. We've got a ton of unreleased material and we've talked about packaging it and stuff like that. We're definitely going to be coming out with some more singles here and we'll see about packaging it around the corner, but we're going to keep pumping out new music and have a lot of stuff that we've been itching to get out ourselves. Not exactly sure how we're going to package it, whether we're just doing singles or if we're going to wrap it up, but it'll be coming out soon.

What do you hope listeners can take away from your music?

Connor: I think just what Christa had said with "Wasted Love", that the songs are relatable to their lives and to their relationships. That and, music's always been so fun and important to us that I think that, if someone can put a Romantic Era record on and they're having a good time with it and dancing and jumping around and getting excited from our work, that's always been important to us, to have that connection with our fans and to give them an outlet. I think that's hopefully what our music does for people and will continue to do.

Is there anything you'd like to add?

Connor: Stay tuned, keep listening, and we appreciate it.

Christa: You said it all, Connor, you said it all, man.

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