Friday, May 29, 2020

Katie's butterfly cupcakes

Two years ago I worked Electric Forest for the first time and I was partnered with a lovely lady named Katie. She is one of the sweetest, kind hearted, hard working, professional peoples I have ever met and had the pleasure of working with. I learned a lot from her in the two weeks we spent together in the campgrounds of electric Forest in the Summer of 2018. Hot, sweaty, disgusting, dirty. 

One of the things that I learned about Katie herself is that she loves to bake. She showed me pictures of cakes she's made, towering cakes wrapped in fondant and decorated like you wouldn't believe that someone did that in their kitchen at home. Cobblers and pies that looked like stuff right out of a Southern Comfort Food cookbook or something. I'm sure I probably mentioned wanting to try any cupcakes that she made or featuring her cupcakes on my blog or something like that.

We both worked Forest last year, too. We weren't partners and even though we were on the same team I was on overnights so we barely saw each other, not as much as I would have liked. People who work in  the world of festivals come from all over, so chances are you usually only see the people you work with, when you work with them.
On-site. Hot, sweaty, disgusting, dirty. What I wouldn't give for those days. 


Fairy doors at Electric Forest 2018

While scrolling through Instagram one day a few weeks ago, I came across a picture of the cutest, colorful butterfly cupcakes. It wasn't a post from one of the many cupcakeries/bakeries that I follow. The cupcakes that look like they should win Cupcake Wars were made by my friend Katie. Her caption under the photo read: "some Spring baking to celebrate this beautiful weather and lots of free time. These butterflies are my absolute favorite thing to make out of chocolate." Not only are these butterfly cupcakes that she made really pretty but when we were partners at Electric Forest we found all 24 fairy doors (if you've been to Forest, you know) and since then  things that flutter remind me of her. 
Also, April showers bring May flowers and butterflies love flowers! 

butterfly cupcakes by Katie
photo by Katie

She used a box mix to make the cupcakes since she's pretty low on baking supplies because of the lock-down. But, with that said, the chocolate butterflies that are on top are the main focus of these cupcakes. Mixing two shades of green food-dye with melted white chocolate, she then dipped the tops of the cupcakes into this mixture to give the tops a smooth finish for the butterflies to rest on. The butterflies are made by mixing melting chocolate and then piping the wings and body onto wax paper. Once the chocolate hardened she transferred the bodies and wings to the cupcake, placing them so that it looks like a butterfly landing on a flower. 
If you don't have pastry bags for piping, sandwich bags can be used by cutting off one of the tips of one of the corners which makes it an easy to clean project. Katie really does make it look and sound easy! 
You can use any flavor cake for the cupcakes, you can use any type of chocolate for the butterflies and you can use frosting instead of a white chocolate shell. You can really get creative and customize these butterflies and they'll look great with any flavor you decide make them! 


butterfly cupcakes by Katie
photo by Katie

It's really neat to see what festie friends are passionate about when they're not on-site working. 
We'll be seeing more cupcake creations from Katie here on Sweet Sound Bites! 
I can't wait until I get to see my friend and maybe be able to try one of her cupcakes. 

Friday, May 22, 2020

BottleRock Napa Valley 2020: local musicians on what it's like to be on a line-up for a festival that's been postponed

The 8th annual BottleRock Napa Valley Festival was announced earlier this year on January 6th with headlining acts from Dave Matthews Band, Stevie Nicks and Red Hot Chili Peppers. That's around the time that most Summer music festivals are announced with Coachella being the first big music festival announcement of the year, every year, of course (Coachella 2020 was announced on January 3rd). 




Set to take place on Memorial Day week like it has every year since 2013, BottleRock Napa Valley is what music festival dreams are made of: there's amazing food options inside and outside of VIP areas, it's not a camping festival and there's a built in day to recover! I was excited to be heading back to BottleRock as an artist hospitality coordinator for a second year, rounding out a busy Spring schedule close to home with some fun in the sun with so many festival friends there working, friends there taking photos of the show and, for the first time for me, friends performing there!
My friend Michael, who's been a drummer for longer than I've known him (which is almost ten years or something crazy like that) has been playing drums with Sam Johnson and Sam Johnson is playing BottleRock! I couldn't be more excited about a music festival lineup and so happy for my friend! 




The next wave of festival announcements that came weren't anything that anyone was expecting or excited about. Since March all events, concerts and music festivals stopped. Now, it is to be expected that an upcoming music festival or tour will not go on as planned. At first they were being postponed, but now we're seeing a lot of shows cancelling their 2020 plans and looking forward to 2021. Of course. This is the logical and necessary step we all have to take to keep each other safe.
Not just ticket holders but workers and musicians, too. Following Coachella's announcement that it's April dates would be pushed to October, BottleRock also announced it's October postponement.
Once my head stopped whirling around my own new work schedule for a split second the first thing I thought of was Michael. Being a local musician trying to make it in whatever sense that means is not easy, or glamourous or "fun" and it doesn't pay the bills. These are all things I've learned through being friends with Michael. And as a festival worker I can relate on some level.
Being a rock star is hard work. Why do we do it? We do it because we love it.





How does it feel to be an up and coming band booked to play your first major music festival that got postponed because of the COVID-19 pandemic?

I asked Sam Johnson and his drummer, Michael Pettett.

Q: How long have you known each other?

SAM: A couple of years, Michael started playing drums for me two years ago I think it was.

Q: After talking with Sam I learned that you met Sam two years ago?! Where did you guys meet?

MICHAEL: We met through the bass player, Tim. Tim and I were in a previous projects before called Be Calm Honcho and Kid Queen. Shortly after those kind of fizzled out Tim contacted me and said that he had an opportunity for me to play with another musician and it happened to be Sam. So Tim made the connection for us to meet and we've been playing together as a three piece ever since.

Q: But you guys only play together live is that correct?

MICHAEL: Correct. Tim is a producer at Different Fur Studios, where Sam does all of his recordings. Sam is signed to Text Me Records which is the label based out of Different Fur. So, Tim works for Sam a lot doing production on some of his songs, he's more involved with the studio process than I am. But we'll see what happens in the future because Sam really wants to incorporate real drums into the production process. 

Q: When were you confirmed to play BottleRock 2020?

SAM:
Really early January, it might have been January 2nd.

MICHAEL: I found out, let's see...the cruise happened in February and I think I found out...I'd have to look at my Instagram posts to see specifically but I think we found out shortly after that? Or the decision was made shortly after that. We were sort of waiting to hear back from the organizers and yeah, I think it was shortly after the cruise.

Q: Did you find out what day you're performing?

SAM: Yeah, on Saturday. Actually, we're suppose to do Sunday as well. On Saturday we're playing one of the stages and then on Sunday we're doing a VIP stage, an acoustic thing. 




Q: Nice! Is it in the Jam Cellars tent or something? I know they do a lot of private little VIP shows in there.

SAM: I think you're right. I do a lot of stuff with Jam Cellars. I've played at their venues. I've done some of their virtual happy hours, they're really good people.

Q: Tell me a little bit about how playing in the Jam Cellars VIP tent on Sunday came around.

MICHAEL:
In the months leading up to BottleRock we established a great friendship with the crew at Jam Cellars. We've played a few shows for them in their tasting room in Downtown Napa and are continuously asked to come back to play. In fact, they offered us a monthly residency to play acoustic shows for them. From that, in turn, they asked us to play their private area at BottleRock on Sunday which is the day after our regularly scheduled performance on Saturday...the same day that Stevie Nicks is headlining!

Q: That's so cool.

MICHAEL: Yeah. The Folks at Jam Cellars have been incredibly sweet to us and very hospitable with everything they're provided for us. They have made it very easy for us to want to keep coming back.

Q: Very cool. Is BottleRock the first festival you've played or have you played other festivals?

SAM: Actually Michael and I and my bass player, Tim just got off of a festival at sea with the band Train. They have their own festival on a cruise ship that goes to the Bahamas with a bunch of bands on it. That was the first festival we played. I've played a bunch of, you know...Alameda Art & Wine festival and Fog Fest in Pacifica that kind of stuff.
BottleRock will be the first major festival that we play.

MICHAEL: Well we played Sail Across the Sun which was the first festival we played but we've played smaller things like Fog Fest in Pacifica. When I was in Bonnie and The Bang Bang we played the local stage at LIVE105's BFD one year and smaller things like along the course at Bay to Breakers.

Q: When Michael told me you guys were playing on a cruise I didn't realize it was a festival.
 
SAM: Yeah, it's a festival at sea, it's called Sail Across the Sun. This year the headliners were Train, Matt Nathanson and Allan Stone.

Q: Fun! How was that? Have you been on a cruise before?

SAM: I had not been on a cruise before, it was super fun. It was totally professionally run by this company called Sixthman. Everything was run like clockwork, the sound is great, the people who run it are really, really professional, they do all kinds of festivals. It was a great time.

Q: When did you find out about the postponement of BottleRock?

SAM: I don't remember what day they announced it. I think it was last month when they announced it. But yeah, I got an email saying it's postponed until October. I'd rather it be in October than right now. 

Q: Definitely. I don't think there's any place that would be able to hold a festival right now.
So did you get an email from the promoter, or the booker? How did that work?

SAM: I don't even remember...they might have emailed my management at the time and then I found out through my management.

MICHAEL: I think it wasn't too long after we got back from the cruise. 

Q:  I take it you're free for the new October dates?

SAM: Oh yeah, those dates are definitely booked for BottleRock for sure

Q: That's definitely something to look forward to

SAM: Yeah, we're stoked!

MICHAEL: I'm absolutely going to be available for the October dates and any dates moving forward. I'm tired of constantly struggling with whether or not I can juggle my job with my music. My entire life has been spent asking for permission to go and play music, when for me, that is backwards. Moving forward post quarantine, I am going to do things differently to ensure that music is at the forefront of my life. More rehearsal time, more gigs, hopefully more touring and playing more festivals.

Q: Have you been to BottleRock before?

SAM: No, I haven't but I do love Napa.

MICHAEL: Yes, I have. I went the year that Florence and The Machine headlined. I attended the day that Death Cab For Cutie played, whatever day that was.

Q: That was 2016. I went to BottleRock that year too! It was so hot!

MICHAEL: You did?! It was hot! I made the mistake of wearing a button up shirt and a blazer...

Q: Napa is beautiful and BottleRock is a unique festival with a great setting, chill vibe and the weather is usually really nice. The new dates will be right around our Indian Summer so it should be nice. Are there any other acts you're looking forward to seeing at BottleRock?

SAM: I haven't seen Dave Mathews perform live, he's been a long time influence so I'm really excited about Dave Mathews and Blondie. Man, there are so many.

MICHAEL: I'm looking forward to everyone. Just being on the same bill and playing a festival with so many great bands, Dave Matthews Band, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Stevie Nicks!?!

Q: Saturdays are usually the busiest day at a three day music festival so that's really awesome you guys are playing on Saturday. Obviously it's even more awesome that you're playing on Saturday and Sunday.

SAM:
Yeah. I got to go to the BottleRock offices and do a private performance for them and they're super cool, got to talk to Tom Hoppa the booker. They're up for some type of award, like best music festival in the country...I really like what they're doing and I'm really looking forward to playing.

Q: Have you been working on any new music during quarantine?

SAM: Yeah, I took quite a while to write so I have a bunch of new songs and I'll get to recording those ASAP. I've also been doing a lot of live streams. I just had a live stream for SF Travel as a special guest for they're meeting with all SF hotels. I had a residency at The Ritz Carlton San Francisco for the last 7 years so it was cool to play for SF Travel. Sounds like a lot of hotels in SF will be back up in June.

MICHAEL: I've been playing more guitar and learning to play new songs on the guitar by watching videos on YouTube. I go into my rehearsal space when I find the motivation to play drums. One of my faves to do during quarantine has been watching Jason McGerr's (of Death Cab For Cutie) segment "Refuge In Practice" on YouTube live stream. It's a show were he brings various drummers that he enjoys and pulls inspiration from, via Zoom. They discuss various exercises they do while at home to maintain their skills and exercise their drum joints but they also talk about the different exercises they bring on tour. It's an entirely different experience as one generally doesn't have a full kit to practice on, but rather just a practice pad. It has kept me engaged with my own drumming challenges. It helps me to see that others, while they're unbelievably talented, still struggle with certain things behind a (drum) kit.

Q: Do you, Sam and Tim rehearse together over zoom or live stream or anything like that?

MICHAEL:
No. Because of the delays it's really hard to rehearse using zoom or whatever it makes it difficult to play different instruments at the same time.

Q:
What are your thoughts on the Live Streaming shows "movement"?

MICHAEL: I am in favor of live streaming shows. While the world is still trying to get it's shit together, it's important that artistic mediums do not take a break. This is a great time to learn how to adapt to an ever changing environment and one way that musicians have adapted is through the use of full Live Stream shows! I myself find it a bit difficult to sit through an entire performance as there is lag time, technical difficulties and the lack of feeling the bass in your bones, however, I think it's a pretty awesome way of staying connected to fans while providing them with free content.

Q: Sounds like you've been able to stay busy and stay creative.

SAM: Yeah. I'm really excited about the possibilities of live streaming. I like to play, I like to play for people, I like to interact but I don't really want to go somewhere hours before a show to set up and then wait around. The fact that now I can do a virtual performance with super high quality audio and video, which is what I am doing on my Facebook page, Sam Johnson Live, all my social media is Sam Johnson Live. I've been doing a live show almost weekly and hosting happy hours. I've been playing virtual meetings and conferences. It's been great, I get damn near the same feeling as playing to a crowd, you get that interaction. I'm not making quite the living that I was but I can see how that will all workout just as well, if not better.

Q: And it's still so new, the live streaming industry if you will. Some people might just be catching on or getting use to streaming a live show in place of going to a live show.

SAM: Exactly. And, a lot of performers are having to learn how to present themselves with professional audio and video and making it a really good performance. In the future it's gonna be... you're at home watching The Rolling Stones perform live from your living room with absolutely amazing audio quality and able to interact perhaps. I think it might even be better than being one person in a huge crowd surrounded by thousands of people not able to see that well, watching on a jumbo tron. Now you can be in your living room, with surround sound, with your family and your close friends and you're not paying $150 each to go and see them.

Q: Hopefully it won't get to that point where people are paying $150 for a live streaming show (laughing)

SAM: (laughs) yeah. For me the future is in live streaming and I think we have barely scratched the surface.

Q: I can agree with you on that, live streaming shows is definitely a new thing that's really flourishing in quarantine and the way that you present it is exciting. As a concert lover and show goer I personally haven't made the transition to streaming live shows.

SAM: If you're free on Sunday May 24th I'm doing a live stream show with guests at 4:00pm.


Q:
Well Sam Johnson, that might just be the first live streaming show I go to! Really looking forward to seeing you live, in person, at BottleRock. Thank you so much.

Q: Do you have anything you'd like to add?

MICHAEL:
While everything seems like we're heading into the dark ages, just remember that we're not. This has been an unbelievably trying time for all of us but I hope that it has made people realize the importance in the arts and artists in their life. While we've been caged in our own homes, artists have been continuously trying to stay afloat. So with that, when this is "all over" PLEASE continue to support artists in a way which you never have before. Buy albums. Buy merch. Subscribe to fan pages. Go to concerts. Support local fundraisers for small venues in your area to ensure that artists still have stages and platforms to come back to. Go to that festival once it re-opens. Show up. We need you now more than ever before. We, as a collective, need to ensure that this renaissance flourishes. This is no longer a time for big business to rule the way we connect. It is our time to ensure the rebirth of art and culture is seamless and stronger than ever!

Thursday, May 14, 2020

The last show I went to before the lock-down: Best Coast @ The Regency Ballroom 2/29/2020

When I saw Best Coast  headline at The Regency Ballroom on February 29th,  I had no idea that it would be the last live show I'd see in SF for the foreseeable future. 

Best Coast @ The Regency Ballroom 2/29/2020
photo by Marc Fong 

It was the second to last night of the 27th annual Noise Pop Music Festival and I only had a few days at home  between working Envision in Costa Rica and Okeechobee Music Fest in Florida. I been approved to cover Bag Raiders at The Independent the night before which was the only show of the week long Noise Pop Festival bill I had planned on going to. 

Best Coast @ The Regency Ballroom 2/29/2020 
photo by Marc Fong 

A few hours before doors opened I got a text asking if I wanted to go to the Best Coast show, turns out my friend had a +1. It was a Saturday night and I already had plans to meet another friend for dinner but The Regency was just down the street, I could totally do both. Get in some double friend time hangs while I was home and see a show. After dinner I hopped in a lyft, got to the venue, waited in line and collected my ticket at will-call. I met my friend inside and got a beer as we chit chatted during most of the opening set. 
 With a longtime, loyal following in the Bay Area and a recently released ew album it wasn't surprising to see the main floor packed by the time Best Coast went on. The aroma of pot and rolling applause filled the air. I don't remember as many people being in the band, in my head Best Coast has always been Bethany Cosentino and Bobb Bruno but there they were, all four of them on stage. 





 
More than half of their set, which consisted of 15 songs, came off of their new album, Always Tomorrow. Two years after their 4th album Best Kids, Always Tomorrow dropped on February 21st so again, it's no surprise we heard a lot of it at the show that night. 

In a power-suit with the band's initials embroidered on the lapels  (which also happen to be her initials) Bethany was looking svelte. The high knot bun she was rocking gave her an alt-rock edge but it was definitely noticeable that the front-lady was carrying herself with a new confidence. 
There weren't too many pauses between songs which is something typical of the LA surf-rock rockers but when there was banter it felt lighter than the previous times I've seen them. Bobb kept to himself as he usually does, behind a fan that softly blows his beautiful long locks around as he plays but there was something different about Bethany, something good and it made me feel happy for her. It was the most personable Best Coast show that I've seen and the crowd was lively so I think they felt the new vibes, too. 

Best Coast @ The Regency Ballroom 2/29/2020
photo by Marc Fong 


I had bought a ticket to see Glass Animals at The Independent on March 12th, I don't buy concert tickets often but I was so excited to see that Glass Animals were playing smaller venues I couldn't miss it! The show was a couple of days after I got home from Okeechobee, things were already starting to feel weird and parts of SF were already a ghost town but I still had hope that afternoon that the show would go on. Sure enough it got canceled. And then all shows everywhere got canceled. 

The neon signed that glowed on stage that night at Best Coast has been burned into my memory, Always Tomorrow

Best Coast @ The Regency Ballroom 2/29/2020
photo by Marc Fong

Tomorrow is a funny thing because it never really comes but you can't give up hope. 
Best Coast at The Regency wasn't suppose to be the last show that I saw in San Francisco this year and maybe it won't be... 
Whenever tomorrow comes, that day when we can go to a show with friends, it will be the best day.
 I'm really looking forward to it. 

Best Coast set-list 2/29/2020
1. California Nights
2. Different Light 
3. Wreckage 
4. The Only Place 
5. Crazy For You 
6. Goodbye 
7. For The First Time 
8. Seeing Red 
9. Everything Has Changed 
10. Our Deal 
11. Rollercoaster 
12. Make It Last 
13. No One Like You 
14. Feeling OK 
15. Graceless Kids 

Monday, May 4, 2020

April showers

You know what they say, April showers bring May flowers and when it rains it pours.
This is the time of year when we usually start seeing more tours rolling through town filling our nights with live shows. Now of course there are no shows but that hasn't stopped the music.
Last month brought us a lot of new music: albums, EPs and so many singles. There are silver linings in the weird state of gray we find ourselves in as we move further into quarantine and social isolation. Mother Earth is healing, artists are finding inspiration to create and music is still bring us together.





WOMB Purity Ring
On February 18th, Purity Ring released "Stardew", their first single since 2015's "Bodyache".
April 3rd served as the birth date, if you will, of the Canadian witch-house duo's third album, WOMB. They haven't strayed too far from what we were introduced to back in 2012 with Shrines; delicate vocals tracing an almost morbid kinship of spiritual and physical pains of life. Comfort can be found in the familiarity of their hauntingly romantic sounds in these times of uncharted uncertainty. 




It Is What It Is Thundercat 
The fourth album from experimental acid-jazz aficionado, Stephen Lee Bruner AKA Thundercat  Along with an appropriate title for an album released during this time in history, It Is What It Is comes at a time when putting on a album and letting it play as you go on with your day is what people need right now came on April 3rd.
















The New Abnormal - The Strokes
With seven years between albums, it's safe to call the April 10th, 2020 release of The Strokes' 6th album, The New Abnormal a comeback. It's unclear if the 9 track album was named before, during or after quarantine but it's arrival time was impeccable. As the world uncomfortably adjusts to it's new "normal" as a resistance to embracing our obvious abnormality, this album has everything we could have asked for from The Strokes. They premiered the opening track, "The Adults are Talking" which happens to be one of my faves from the new album, at their concert at The Wiltern in LA last May. "Bad Decisions" is another new favorite of mine and is considered an official single from The New Abnormal. Because of music festival and tour cancellations it might be a while until we get to see The Strokes play these new tunes live but like their new album, it will be worth the wait.




Fetch the Bolt Cutters - Fiona Apple
Fiona Apple delivered her first album in eight years on Friday April 17th. Fetch the Bolt Cutters is percussion fueled, piano filled soulful and insightful. Fiona continues to get acclaimed praise for her 5th album since it's release as a great, conceptual piece. It's raw, abounded energy emulates life interrupted and goes with the flow.  Like others on this list, it's title could be a sign of the times but lyrics of the title track, "fetch the bolt cutters, I've been in here too long", are without a doubt how all of us who have been in lock down feel.


Good Souls Better Angels - Lucinda Williams
Have you ever heard blues that stick to your bones? Once you listen to the new album from Lucinda Williams, you'll know what I mean. On April 23rd, three years after her last album, Good Souls Better Angels is Lucinda Williams' 15th album.  As soon as I pressed play I liked what I heard. Since we seem to be waking up to bad news everyday these days "Bad News Blues" really strikes a cord and the song that follows, "Man Without a Soul" makes me wonder who she's singing about (I have a good idea). Her gravely baritone is powerfully moving on all 12 songs. 
These new blues from Lucinda Williams will fill your soul.







To Feel Alive (EP)- Kali Uchis 
The latest release from the 25 year old, Columbian- American singer/songwriter Kali Uchis dropped on April 24th.The 4 track EP, To Feel Alive was never slated to exist but when Uchis found herself in quarantine isolation she decided to bring her fans "a little momentary excitement and emotion". So, she hunkered down in a make-shift recording studio in her bedroom and wrote, produced and preformed To Feel Alive all on her own. It's been said that the 4 track EP is her most revealing musical self-portrait yet. 




Fragile - MNDR  
MNDR keeps teasing a new album with new singles. She shared "Fragile" on April 3rd. 
RISE - Alison Mosshart 
The Kills and The Dead Weather's front-woman released her first solo work on April 9th.


Kyoto - Phoebe Bridgers 
Two singles from Bridgers dropped on April 9th, "Kyoto" and "Garden Song". Her 2nd album, Punisher, is due out June 19th. 
Inside Friend - John Mayer & Leon Bridges 
their first collab dropped at midnight on April 10th
Forever - Charli XCX 
"Forever" is her first single off of her upcoming new album. It was created in quarantine  two days before it's April 10th release date. 
Tame Impala and The Streets single
This surprising collab came on April 13th. 
Hollywood Park - The Airborne Toxic Event  
The first new music from The Airborne Toxic Event came on April 14th. The new single, "Hollywood Park" is off their upcoming album due out on May 8th.  
Walls - The Lumineers
The Lumineers released their cover of "Walls" by Tom Petty on April 16th to benefit MusiCares. 
I'm Ready - Sam Smith Demi Devoto 
the two pop stars hyped up their single leading up to it's April 17th release. 
Rock Bottom - Misterwives
Misterwives announced a ne single on April 20th and on April 22nd we got hit with "Rock Bottom".  
Living in a Ghost Town - The Rolling Stones
The Stones are still at it. Their answer to social distancing dropped on April 23rd. 
Time (You and I) - Khruangbin
On April 27th, the psychedelic, disco driven new groove from Khruangbin gave us a preview of what to expect on their new album in June. 
Savage Remix feat. Beyoncé - Megan Thee Stallion 
On April 29th the buzz around Megan Thee Stallion got a little louder with the Queen Bey jumping on a remix version of the budding star's hot single.
I Know Alone - HAIM 
The Haim sisters are working on a new album and gave us a little taste with "I Know Alone" on April 29th. 



A few May flowers have already popped up, too: 
Dreamland - Glass Animals (May 1st) 
Be Kind- Marshmello feat. Halsey (May 1st) 
Julianna Calm Down - Dixie Chicks (May 1st)