DeliRadio and Trumer Pilsner Present:
Caldecott, The Soft White Sixties, and The Real Nasty
- When
- Wed Aug 15, 2012
- Where
- The New Parish
- Time
- Doors 8:00, Show 9:00
- Tags
- Indie Music, Music, Rock
Description
DeliRadio, The East Bay Express, and Trumer Pilsner present the second in our Wednesday night series at The New Parish in Oakland.Wednesday, August 15th features three slamming local bands - Caldecott, The Soft White Sixties, and The Real Nasty.
Plus DJ sets by Diamond Jim!
Once again we're bringing you $3 Trumer Pilsner all night and a $3 food menu.
Entrance is FREE!
Preview all three bands here: http://dr.fm/NLrCm8
and learn more about each band below.
Caldecott - http://deliradio.com/caldecott
Caldecott is an organically grown band of working men, creating music based on experiences in the Bay Area and beyond. Each aspect of Caldecott contributes a unique and essential taste in music, which is shaped into something all communities can appreciate. The group takes any opportunity to build beautiful melodies and foot-stomping rhythms not only for themselves, but also for everyone that understands passionate music and good times. Caldecott holds a family dinner every week, and they hope to see you there soon.
The Soft White Sixties - http://deliradio.com/the-soft-white-sixties
San Francisco’s The Soft White Sixties are a hard-driving, original rock and roll band that delivers R&B grooves and pop hooks with the transformative power of raw soul.
They have been described as "a perfect mix of on the side of a railroad track blues and early seventies psych-meets-arena-rock" (Owl Mag) and likened to "a feast of Hamm’s ale and cheap cigarettes on the porch with Duane Allman and Dan Auerbach" (Sacramento Press).
These five comrades-in-harmony have generated a devoted following through sold-out shows at The Bay Area's best-known venues such as Cafe du Nord, Bottom of the Hill, The Rickshaw Stop, The New Parish, The Independent, and The Great American Music Hall. The 'Sixties rapidly expanded their reach in 2010 with featured slots in SF's IndieFest and Summerfest music festivals, prime-time TV appearances and sold-out performances on Sacramento's indie circuit, and a whirlwind West Coast Tour from Seattle to LA. With only an out-of-print 7" and burned CD of studio demos, The ‘Sixties garnered airplay on SF's flagship rock station Live 105, who named them as one of the top ten bands in the Bay Area.
The Real Nasty - http://deliradio.com/the-real-nasty
Throughout rock history, one thing has always been crystal clear: the best bands don’t stay still very long. Stagnation is death and repetition nothing but a bore. Taking risks, dodging complacency, never looking back—that’s where timeless music comes from. The Real Nasty, the celebrated Oakland, California-based trio formed in January 2009, has already done more evolving in that short span than most bands do in a lifetime. Now, with the release of Dirty Dollars, their third CD for the Ninth Street Opus label in as many years, they’ve taken a quantum leap.
Wherever they perform, even outside of their Bay Area home base, it’s been love at first listen for the Real Nasty’s audiences. “Being together on the road as a band and having to prove to audiences that we believe in our music and showing people that we have something worth hearing, seeing and being a part of has been invaluable in our ability to honestly convey our music,” Ryan says. “People genuinely get into the music, stop talking, pay attention and listen. We turn heads everywhere we play and are having so much fun together that our interaction onstage gets people excited to see what is going to happen. We are a go-for-it band and I would crash and burn a hundred times for the one perfect moment. I think all of us share that sentiment because we want to be fearless, badass, shocking and exciting.”
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