
One of our favorite bands ever hit up the Music Hall of Williamsburg during CMJ. We totally had flashbacks of interviewing a young Mini T’s during their first ever NYC visit in 2008 at the festival. How time flys. We feel like proud parents. View all of the photos from the show HERE!
Tag Archives: cmj 2010
CMJ 2010 – The Recap

I’m not sure how long it is going to take us to recover from this CMJ. Interviewing everyone from Class Actress to Frankie Rose and the Outs, to filming Jukebox the Ghost to Brian Bonz, we barely had time to eat (1am hamburger anyone?).
The interviews and filmings will trickle in slowly this week as we sort through one of the craziest weeks of our lives. But keep checking back, because we have some incredible footage.
Look further down the page from some early highlights of the week!
Jukebox the Ghost Rocked the Delancey at CMJ
Jukebox the Ghost tore the roof ….Well,the basement of the Delancey playing a daytime party for SneakAttack Media and Steve Madden music during CMJ 2010
These guys take rocking keyboard grooves and amazing songwriting and bring pinching energy to their fans. Right away from the start of their set, the band got the crowd going with awesome piano beats and strong guitar licks. There were alot of day parties and regular showcases going on during CMJ , but being up front you could tell all the college radio DJ’s were in the front of the crowd paying attention to these young rockers. I hate making comparisons when talking about bands, but these guys have the same gusto and fan appeal as 90’s rockers Ben Folds Five.
I see big things from Jukebox the Ghost in the next year or so.
Make sure you pick up their newest cd “Everything Under the Sun” on Yeproc records.
The band will be touring the rest of 2010 with dates with Guster as well as Barenaked Ladies.
– Joe Madonna
Bad Books Rocked Out and Sold Out at the Bowery Ballroom -CMJ
Doesn’t matter if you enjoy reading or not, Bad Books carved themselves open at the CMJ this year. We’re talking about a music side collective consisting of New York local artist Kevin Devine and Andy Hull, the frontman of an Atlanta-based indie-rock group Manchester Orchestra.The band’s material is founded upon the close friendship between Hull and Devine. The two produce a contrast of buoyant folk-rock while interweaving threads of swelling alternative rock. With lyrics that are histrionically driven and dizzying spontaneity, the Bad Books won themselves a sold out show on Wednesday night at the Bowery Ballroom.
Bad Books released their self-titled album You Wouldn’t Have To Ask, on Tuesday, October 19 just a day before their New York show and will continue on touring across the nation through the month of December.
***Tour Dates***
Bad Books at North Star Bar w/ Right Away, Great Captain!, Gobotron & Hardello, Philadelphia, PA
Sat, October 23 @ 6:00 PM
Bad Books at Ottobar w/ Right Away, Great Captain!, Gobotron & Hardello, Baltimore, MD
Sun, October 24 @ 6:00 PM
Bad Books at FG Present: “The Stuffing” @ The Center Stage Atlanta Music Complex, Atlanta, GA
Wed, November 24 @ 5:00 PM
Bad Books at Andy & Kevin Devine @ Cats Cradle, Carrboro, NC
Wed, December 01 @ 8:30 PM
Bad Books at Andy & Kevin Devine @ New Brookland Tavern, West Columbia, SC
Thu, December 02 @ 7:30 PM
Bad Books at Andy & Kevin Devine @ The 567, Macon, GA
Fri, December 03 @ 8:30 PM
Bad Books at Andy & Kevin Devine @ The Social, Orlando, FL
Sat, December 04 @ 8:30 PM
Bad Books at Andy & Kevin Devine @ The Orpheum, Tampa, FL
Sun, December 05 @ 7:30 PM
-Viktorsha Uliyanova
Back Up North. Air Waves Interview.
Winter isn’t here yet and Air Waves are already mapping out pins for the new year. Air Waves is a music project created by Nicole Schneit, who has been undergoing a fluctuating capsule of transitioning band members and tasting the crowd of southern habitat. Still, her heart-warming lyrics and catchy head-bopping tunes set themselves apart from the uniformed nature of indie-pop.
It is known that you moved away to Austin at the end of this past summer, what brings you back to New York?
We have an album coming out really soon, so we thought it would be nice to play for a little bit before it is released.
What made you decide to move away from New York?
My girlfriend lives in Austin and we had been long-distance for about two years, so she was going to come here, but I have lived in New York my whole life, so I decided to move there. I’m coming back in February.
Did you grow up in the city?
I was raised in Nyack, New York, it’s about an hour away. I moved to the city and lived here for about eight years in Greenpoint, Brooklyn.
Have your writing techniques changed with the move?
I’d been playing more guitar and keyboard, because it’s a bit more accessible in the house. I’m trying out different instruments, which is really fun. I enjoy when people take on instruments they don’t really have an idea of how to play. When I play guitar it’s more of a repetition and me playing the same chords and songs, so I’ve been doing more experimenting than songwriting. It’s been less lyrical living in Austin so far.
Is it more difficult to write music in Brooklyn or Austin?
Neither, but in Austin I have more privacy.
How would you describe your music to someone from another planet and who has never heard it before?
Another planet, like ET? (laughs)Minimal pop, or something similar to that.
With the departure of your last drummer, you have transitional band members, who writes most of the material?
I write the songs on my guitar and the lyrical content, then I bring it to the band and they take off from there and come up with their part.
Do you have a new drummer on the rise?
We’re looking, no luck so far. We’re trying to figure out if we need someone who lives in Austin or in New York, and it’s difficult because we’re going to be touring a lot.
What do you enjoy about being a part of the CMJ?
It’s really cool to see all of my friends. Even though Austin feels like the music capital right now, nowhere else has as many bands and as much creativity as New York. Even in Austin, when I go to shows and play there, the same people go, I can only really play there once a month, not more than that. In New York, there is a different crowd every time.
You’re currently touring here, on the East Coast, where are you most excited about performing your tunes?
Vermont! I just love it , it’s so pretty there and I’m excited to drive through there this time of the year. I don’t even know anything about the venue.
Do you have plans to tour the West?
Yes, probably January or February.
What is your favorite song to perform live?
Newest material is always the most fun to perform to see if people like it and share the freshness of it. Right now it’s this song “Ride.”
Which song do the fans ask the most for?
Definitely “Shine On.” I haven’t been playing it that much. (laughs)
How have you been adjusting to the music scene outside of New York?
It’s been very hard. I don’t really have band members there. I’ve played two shows with Adam from Yellow Fever. I can’t say I’ve totally found a nitch there yet. I’m just glad to be working on my music inside my home, playing in Austin will come later.
-Viktorsha Uliyanova
Miniature Tigers Flourish MHOW – CMJ
Agitated whirpool of mind-numbness. That is only one of the few ways we are able describe Brooklyn during its first night of CMJ. Williamsburg underwent a hurricane of Kevin Devine fans infiltrating the sidewalks and alleys outside the infamous Music Hall. Opening up,one of Modern Mystery’s favorite Brooklyn-based heart-throbs, Miniature Tigers set off the evening. The band injected the crowd with a dosage of synth-rock ripples,vibrating drum pulsations and nothing but tummy-fluttering guitar splashes. The boys’ performance impressed the locals as well as visitors,and eliminated themselves out of the prepackaged New York indie scene. Definitely one of the bands that is worth seeing during the CMJ madness.
Miniature Tigers have been keeping busy, and are preparing for their national tour in November.
Setlist:
Tropical Birds
Rock n Roll, Mountain Troll
Bullfighter Jacket
Egyptian Robe
Coyote Enchantment
Dark Tower
Lolita
Mansion of Misery
-Viktorsha Uliyanova





