ivy room presentsFRIDAY MARCH 14âMIKE DILLON & PUNKADELICKSupport TBDâDoors 7:00pm / Show 8:00pm$18 Advance / $23 DoorâIVY ROOM860 San Pablo Ave, Albany ⢠21+MIKE DILLON & PUNKADELICKMike Dillon & Punkadelick makes its recorded debut with Inflorescence, an album of heady, instrumental rock highlighting a band deep in the throes of creative freedom, road tested and wild. Consisting of 10 tracks in 42-minutes, itâs an expansive, focused and fearless collection, representing a world where Duke Ellington and Augustus Pablo rub shoulders with crate-digger exotica, the freak-funk of Parliament and the âanything fitsâ outsider ethos of acid-fried punks like The Meat Puppets.A trio featuring Mike Dillon (Ricki Lee Jones, Ani DiFranco, Les Claypool) on vibraphone, marimba, Prophet 6, congas, and bongos, Brian Haas (Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey) on Fender Rhodes, piano, bass Moog and melodica and Nikki Glaspie (Beyonce) on drums, cymbals and vocals, Punkadelick is the unified vision of six hands creating a world that often sounds like the work of an ensemble three times the size.During 2020 and 2021, while many music venues were still shuttered, the group began touring, sweating their way through cuts Dillon and Haas had composed during quarantine writing sessions...
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ivy room presentsFRIDAY MARCH 14âMIKE DILLON & PUNKADELICKSupport TBDâDoors 7:00pm / Show 8:00pm$18 Advance / $23 DoorâIVY ROOM860 San Pablo Ave, Albany ⢠21+MIKE DILLON & PUNKADELICKMike Dillon & Punkadelick makes its recorded debut with Inflorescence, an album of heady, instrumental rock highlighting a band deep in the throes of creative freedom, road tested and wild. Consisting of 10 tracks in 42-minutes, itâs an expansive, focused and fearless collection, representing a world where Duke Ellington and Augustus Pablo rub shoulders with crate-digger exotica, the freak-funk of Parliament and the âanything fitsâ outsider ethos of acid-fried punks like The Meat Puppets.A trio featuring Mike Dillon (Ricki Lee Jones, Ani DiFranco, Les Claypool) on vibraphone, marimba, Prophet 6, congas, and bongos, Brian Haas (Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey) on Fender Rhodes, piano, bass Moog and melodica and Nikki Glaspie (Beyonce) on drums, cymbals and vocals, Punkadelick is the unified vision of six hands creating a world that often sounds like the work of an ensemble three times the size.During 2020 and 2021, while many music venues were still shuttered, the group began touring, sweating their way through cuts Dillon and Haas had composed during quarantine writing sessions. Locking in on stage, it quickly became clear the band was functioning at a level that made the hair on their arms stand at attentionâeven for three live music veterans accustomed to life on the road.âIt became obvious to let this become a collaboration,â Dillon says. âThis is really something all three of us are doing because we have so much love for one another and a love for the music that we started creating.ââThereâs only three of us, but we move together like a big, nasty school of fish,â Haas adds, laughing.During the tail end of a 2021 tour, the band booked time to record with engineerâand functioning fourth band memberâChad Meise, and Inflorescence sprouted. Opener âDesert Monsoon,â sets the stage with a spiritual-jazz intro of organ, vibraphone, percussion and wordless vocal coos before crackling to life as a swaggering funk strut. The title track, and âPandas,â dig into thick dub textures built around Glaspieâs drumming and Haasâs subwoofer-straining bass synths.âApocalypse Daydream,â which appeared as an exotic head-nodder on 2020âs Shoot the Moon (titled âApocalyptic Daydreamsâ) is reborn as a meatier jazz-rock slab where Dillon and Haas circle each other like Television performing as a lounge act on a cruise ship sailing seas of psilocybin.Bending ears and surprising audiences has long been part of Dillonâs MO and Glaspie and Haas act as perfect foils for forays into the weird. While Dillon bristles at the âpunk jazzâ tag, punk rock and jazz remain core influences to the band, in sound and spirit.âWeâre students of the titans of music. We grew up listening to punk and rock ânâ roll but we also love instrumental musicâparticularly the forefathers of Black American Music. In our minds, Led Zeppelin and Milt Jackson, Parliament-Funkadelic and The Minutemen, The Bad Brains and Frank Zappa are interconnected influences,â explains Dillon. âAll that comes together in how we approach instrumental creative music. Both punk rock and jazz are not prefab things, theyâre about the freedom. We have no genre restriction in this band, and people who get it really respect that.âMaybe the greatest example of the bandâs punk-steeped sonic free-for-all is âSlowly But Surely,â a track Dillon told Haas to compose as if he were âwriting for Queens of the Stone Age.â The song plays like QOTSA translated to piano runs, vibes and deeply swinging drumsâbig-riff stoner rock upended and played with huge smiles by Americaâs premier proponents of the unclassifiable.âWe try to challenge our listeners. Weâre touching a nerve with people who maybe donât want to see the same songs done in the same variations all night long,â continues Dillon. âPart of my mission is taking these instruments that are primarily designed for the orchestral or jazz world and taking them to the rock world, the club world, running them through pedals and effects. Weâre not afraid to be soft, or to surprise. Thatâs what we all do in this band â get beyond our own conceptions of what music is supposed to be.ââWe are so blessed and lucky to do what we do for a living â itâs apparent in the music,â Glaspie chimes in. âIt doesnât matter how the day is going, but we get to the club, set up and crush the gig, all the other stuff doesnât matter. Weâre likeminded individuals who love life, love people and want to spread happiness.â
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