Your cart
Close Alternative Icon

Knick Knack News

GravelRoad's Psychedelta reviewed by Australian Music Blog i-94

"If The Black Keys are the acceptable, mainstream face of blues, these guys deserve their time in the sun. Not that they see a lot of it in hometown Seattle, one of the wettest cities on the US West Coast but that's a digression. You're here for the music - and Gravelroad deliver in big, bottom-heavy shovel loads.

If the name's familiar it may be because Gravelroad is the backing band for bluesman T-Model Ford, whose recent album on Alive made an impression around these parts, especially for its forays into psych jams. You'll find the same touches here but if you're into labels this is Deep Blues. Gravelroad have done the touring miles, on their own and with T-Model, and it shows. They fill the soundscape but leave spaces in the right places but more obviously play this shit with a huge degree of self assurance.

Lead track "Devil Eyes" nails it from the outset. Its simple chord progression and languid swing are smothered in muffled bullfrog vocals and a stinging guitar break-out. The sound's imposing for a three piece. Bassist Jon Newman and guitarist Steven Zilloux split vocals (or abandon them on the quirky instro "Furry".)

Delta blues influences to one side, "Caves" is the most overtly trippy song, a meandering and searing gaze into Owsley's laboratory that floats along. "Leave Her Alone" locks into a groove and cuts out just as it threatens to go other places. "Let Me Hold You" is a restrained closer, its vocal way in the background.

Production tricks are non-existent. There's a bit of reverb, a little echo, and that's it. The band mixed it with master producer Jim Diamond of the Motor City.

There's a certain audience "Psychedelta" will appeal to. It's probably not the Black Keys listeners who think they started last week. Gravelroad eschews the melodic trimmings. This is music to be absorbed late at night, not passed off with a cursory listen."

- The Barman

 

http://www.i94bar.com/reviews/gravelroad.php

Continue reading

Lost Dogma's new album 'The Ghost You Left Behind reviewed on jambands.com

Lost Dogma The Ghost You Left Behind

"“Speed Dial”, for instance, is as FM-ready as Tom Petty’s best: passionate lyrics delivered with enough of an edge to be real; an arrangement that complements the drama of the words without hyperbole; and even some brace-off-and-let-it-fly guitar (courtesy of master picker/vocalist Dave Brewer)."

-Brian Robbins, jambands.com

click here for full text

 

 

Continue reading

Lost Dogma release 'The Ghost You Left Behind' on Knick Knack Records

Knick Knack Records Announces New Lost Dogma Album, “The Ghost You Left Behind”
Lost Dogma’s sophomore release, “The Ghost You Left Behind”, will be released on CD by Seattle-based Knick Knack Records on Friday, July 20th 2012, at Seattle’s Tractor Tavern.
A sneak peek via the brilliant and powerful “Sunny Divide” is available for streaming and downloads at: www.knickknackrecords.com
“Ghost” picks up where their 2009 debut, “Hard Times”, left off, albeit with a noticeable growth in musicality, songwriting and production. Equally influenced by classic American artists like Tom Petty, Gram Parsons as well as blues, modern folk and Bakersfield country, Lost Dogma typifies the bubbling undercurrent of Americana at its best. Their songs are unpretentious and heartfelt; sweeping, lush and haunting all in the same breath and all with an insistent beat and focused energy that let you know this is still a rock and roll band.
Lost Dogma consists of some of Seattle’s finest veteran musicians. Leading the band is former Dandilyon Soup singer/guitarist Rev. Toby C. Brady. The bass and guitar roles are Travis Hartman and Dave Brewer; both from The Bradbury Press, they also add the vocal harmonies that make the songs come to life. Drummer Michael Alex has played with The Missionary Position, Hart and the Hurricane as well as many other Seattle bands. Kent Halvorsen is the newest member and has played keyboards in Sky Cries Mary, and Manoogi Hi.
Since their last album the band has seen its share of triumph and tragedy, from traveling across the Northwest and garnering acclaim for the intensity of their live performances to the recent loss of keyboard player, Trey Tidwell, to cancer in 2011. "Part of the beauty of this record, to me," Brady says, "… because of Trey getting sick, we only had two or three takes on most of the songs and that was it." As for the marked upgrades in songwriting, sound and production, “we definitely set out to pay more attention to that stuff, but really it was a natural evolution."
Lost Dogma’s Zen-like approach to recording carries over to the multiple meanings of the album’s title as well, as Brady explains, "Obviously there’s a reference to Trey” As Brady explains, “I’ve always felt that when you create something, it’s an imprint of the past, and that’s the ghost right there; it’s a brief moment that lasts forever, and you hope to somehow capture it."
Continue reading

Lonesome Shack: Blues-Fueled Time Machine

Lonesome Shack take the time out of their US tour to sit down with jambands.com writer Brian Robbins for this interview: 

“What are, ‘Canned beans spread on a tortilla in a convenience store parking lot’?”

If you’re ever on Jeopardy and – under the category of “Musical Food” – the clue is “What groove-propelled bluesmen fortify themselves with before embarking on a set of time-traveling, dimension-straddling blues,” then slap your buzzer, look ol’ Alex Trebek right square in the eye, and lay that opening sentence on him.

If there’s any problem with that answer-in-the-form-of-a-question, then you just have Mr. Trebek call me, as I know this pearl of wisdom to be a fact, Jack. At least, in the case of Lonesome Shack– who do as much groove-propelled time traveling and dimension straddling as anyone I’ve ever met.

While I was waiting to meet up with Lonesome Shack for their set at a little pub called Guthrie’s in Lewiston, ME, my cellphone rang – it was Shack’s singer/guitarist Ben Todd.

“Are you in the area?” he wanted to know.

“Yeah,” I answered. “We’re parked alongside the sidewalk, looking right at Guthrie’s sign. How about you guys?”

“We’re just finishing up eating … we’re here in town, too.”

“Did you have something good?” I asked. I knew Todd and drummer Kristian Garrard had driven through from Winooski, VT on that unseasonably cold spring day – a trip that deserved meatloaf and mashed potatoes, at least.

“Umm …” Ben Todd paused, then chuckled. “Beans out of a can, spread on tortillas. It’s, uh, that kind of a trip. We’ll see you in a few minutes, okay?”

In a way, it only served to solidify my early impression of Lonesome Shack: nobody plays music like this because of its marketability – they play it because it’s in them and needs to come out.

When Todd and Garrard (and, when he’s available, bassist Luke Bergman) go deep in a set – transporting themselves and everyone around them to some mystical place where WWII has just ended and country blues has not only gotten electrified, but picked up some world rhythms, as well – they’re not putting on an act.

That’s just what Lonesome Shack does.

Something happens as Lonesome Shack prepares to play. It’s subtle, at first: no one notices the colors of the room begin to fade when Kristian tightens down the wingnut on his big crash cymbal with the horrid-looking rip in its guts. And although the air inside Guthrie’s is smoke-free and lightly infused with cool food smells from the kitchen area, there’s a smokiness – felt, not smelled – when Ben hauls his Tiesco out of the case and plugs it in. Kristian drapes a t-shirt across his snare; Ben trades off his watch cap for a well-beaten wide-brimmed hat. The room is almost completely black and white now. Lewiston, ME in 2012 has become Avalon, MS a long time ago. (Along with some other place and time that nobody has experienced yet.) Lonesome Shack begins their set.

My wife pointed out the WA plate on the Subaru that pulled up in front of Guthrie’s: “What do you think?”

“Gotta be them,” I said. Lewiston – followed by an appearance in Belfast, ME the following day at the Free Range Festival – was the eastern end of a big cross-country circle Garrard and Todd were making from Seattle and back. They were hop-scotching from show-to-show, playing mostly small clubs like Guthrie’s. (Garrard told me the most successful show on the eastbound leg was a last-minute gig at a record shop in Rapid City, SD – on Record Store Day. “It was cool,” Kristian said. “Everybody seemed to be loving it and we sold a bunch of records.”)

Sure enough, it was the two Lonesome Shackers that climbed out of the Subaru; they resembled the photos I’d seen of them, anyway. Their handshakes were solid, but they weren’t what you call loud men – Garrard, in fact, comes across as quite shy. It’s almost hard to believe that these are the two groove monsters who created the music on 2010’s greasy raunchfest Slidin’ Boa.

Ben Todd thought they had a few minutes to hang out and chat before they needed to set up their minimalist gear – a stripped-to-the-bones drum set and both guitar and mic driven through the same small amp.

“What time do you guys start?” I asked. They’d be opening a three-band bill, with fellow Seattleans The Curious Mystery and Maine’s own Arborea following them. The two of them shrugged in unison. Garrard grinned.

“I don’t know,” he said softly. “Somebody will probably tell us.”

click here for the full text

Continue reading

GravelRoad performance on June 7, 2012 in SSG Music

"Since the release of their first record in 2004, Gravelroad have refined their sound while touring nationally and internationally, including prominent festival appearances and two albums of collaborations with legendary 90+-year old Mississippi blues man T Model Ford. Their latest album, Psychedelta, is their most accomplished yet. The album’s ten songs sometimes call to mind an alternate history in which classic 60s blues-derived hard and acid rock was heavily influenced by the trance-like grooves of North Mississippi hill country blues artists such asR.L. Burnside and Junior Kimbrough."

Chris Green, SSG Music

http://www.ssgmusic.com/tonight-in-seattle-mothers-anger-dead-man-gravelroad-the-tempers-and-more/

Continue reading

GravelRoad featured in Classic Rock Magazine

Here's what Classic Rock Magazine had to say about GravelRoad's most recent record 'Psychedelta'

"We played it. In fact, we’ve hardly stopped playing it since, totally sucked in by its seriously-stoned ZZ Top grooves, ramshackle riffs and blissful sunbaked blues (think Cooder’s Paris, Texas played by Otto from The Simpsons). With its hypnotic grooves and languid guitar licks, Psychedelta shimmers like the heat wave we listened to it in."

 

http://www.classicrockmagazine.com/music_and_videos/music-free-download-and-exclusive-full-album-stream-from-psychedelic-blues-rockers-gravelroad/

Continue reading

When Anti-Folk and Folk Collide--The Foghorns perform at Northwest Folklife

Among a range of exciting local folk musicians, the forty-first Northwest Folklife Festival will feature a band that defines itself as “anti-folk”, Knick Knack Records’ The Foghorns. The Foghorns began performing in Brooklyn in 2002, part of the movement that combined punk ethics with folk instrumentation. Somewhere along the line “anti-folk” became the name for the movement. The Foghorns have since moved on to Iceland and finally Seattle. The Foghorns will perform on the Indie Roots stage at 8:30 PM on May 27, and as part of the Harry Smith Tribute at the Northwest Court on May 28th.

After Northwest Folklife, the Foghorns will return to their regular home, Tractor Tavern, for a gig on June 5th. You can follow The Foghorns at www.facebook.com/thefoghorns.

For an interesting article by Foghorns lyricist and singer Bart Cameron that discusses, in detail, his thoughts on Harry Smith, folk music, and his Iowa folk revival childhood, check this link: http://ballofwax.org/2012/04/blues-revival-through-seattle-gravelroad-carrying-on-harry-smiths-legacy/

The Foghorns’ last album, To the Stars on the Wings of a Pig (2011), received praise from Seattle Weekly, SSGMUSIC, and the Weekly Volcano, among others.

below is a fan video of the Foghorns performance of the song Lullaby at the Folklife Festival

Continue reading