Friday, April 17, 2009

Alexandra VA 4-15-09 setlist (Carly's)





Run Chicken Run
Big Surprise
Loves Me Tenderly
Whiskey in my Whiskey
Cooperstown
Chicken Wire
Ruby Mae
Memphis Flu
Captain's Wife (new!)
Greatest Show on Earth
Desert of Galilee (new!)
Goddamn You, Jim
Helen Fry
Murder By Mistletoe
Marie (awesome!!!!)
Frankie's Gun
Her Eyes Dart Round (my #1 favorite song of theirs--they were debating
at the show whether to play this or the Ballad of Loe the Welterweight
but I said to Ian, "Please play her eyes dart round, it's my
favorite!" and he said "It's your favorite?" and I said yes and he
played it.)
Penn Station
---
Encore: St. Stephen's End
A song sung by Farley (Editor's note, assuming this is the song i call "Lay Me Down"
Two Hands
Let Me Come Home

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Simone Felice's Live Debut with the Duke and The King


Buy tickets here


At Union Hall in Brooklyn.

A historic night, and a super cozy venue.

May 20th.

I am sure most of us have heard his single "If you Ever Get Famous" for the past month or so. The recent announcement by Simone that he is indeed going his own way, certainly brings those lyrics into focus, a little more clearly. I will try to get thos lyrics out soon.

Felice Brothers At Valentines in Albany April 10 2009 review


Like real estate, live shows come down to three things: location,
location, location. This was proven again during The Felice Brothers
April 10 show at Valentine's in Albany, NY.

This concert couldn't have been any more different than the band's
September appearance in Albany at the Linda Norris Auditorium. At The
Linda show the crowd was confined to their seats and mostly sat
politely with their hands folded while the band played. Valentine's?
This was the polar opposite.

They opened the set as they have at many shows during this tour,
coming on stage one at a time with The Big Surprise. After that they
launched into Loves Me Tenderly, which pretty much set the stage for
what was to be a raucous night of sing-along, washboard-slamming,
guitar-pounding fun. I would have jotted down the complete set list,
but a pencil in my hand would have been nothing but dangerous to the
people standing near me.

It was interesting that they mix things up a little, too. You can
imagine a band getting tired of playing a crowd pleaser like Frankie's
Gun night after night, but they brought it down with a funky beat that
gave the song a decidedly fresh groove.

The comparisons to Dylan and The Band that music critics lean on when
reviewing The Felice Brothers are getting extremely old. You
understand how wrong they are when you see these guys in a bar or
dancehall.The vibe at Valentine's was more like punk shows that I've
seen than anything else: rough, raw, and with pure energy that spilled
off the stage.

Rob Madeo

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Uncut Magazine Yonder is the Clock Review (5 out of 5 stars)


The Felice Brothers have aptly taken the title of their new LP from a line in The Mysterious Stranger, a post-humously published novella by great American writer Mark Twain, author also of The Adventures Of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, classics both of a literary Americana as evocative of a glimmering mythic past as anything you’ll find on Harry Smith’s Anthology Of American Folk Music, that repository of “the old, weird America”, or, for that matter, The Basement Tapes.

The Mysterious Stranger, in contrast to those fabulist confections featuring Tom and Huck, was a bleak satire about mankind’s general wretchedness, wholly unsparing. In it, the Young Satan, nephew, apparently, of the senior Satan of Biblical disrepute, is an angel come to earth to reveal to his gathered acolytes that life is meaningless, their God nothing more than a vast indifference. The chapter from which this album takes its name ends with an astonishing tirade against the coarse manipulation of popular opinion by seeded minorities – religious and secular – and the submission to their will of the craven majority, whose servile obedience, hypocritical acquiescence and self-serving spinelessness is apparently boundless.

Twain’s bitter rant – withering satire worthy of Phil Ochs or Randy Newman – has an obvious contemporary relevance to post 9/11 America, the rise of the religious right and a ‘war on terror’ inspired by a conniving cabal whose greed was disguised as patriotism, all opposition to their calamitous adventure denounced as treasonous betrayal. The public’s complicity in all this would have been sad confirmation for Twain of their disastrous gullibility, not much having apparently changed in the 100 years since he wrote The Mysterious Stranger.

That book’s eternal pessimism gusts like a cold hard wind through Yonder Is The Clock, which occupies an allegorical landscape as vividly imagined as the world described by Dylan on John Wesley Harding, that dusty bowl of cruel despair, bad things heading its way. The Felice Brothers have previously been no strangers to the raw hurt of things, the desperate scrabbling of the bereft and oppressed, life’s losers pinned to a wheel of pain and left to hang until their hands rot off. You think, for instance, of songs like “Rockefeller Druglaw Blues” from 2007’s Tonight At The Arizona and “Frankie’s Gun” from last year’s The Felice Brothers, which was shortlisted for the inaugural Uncut Music Award. These were grim tales of young men driven to crime by economic circumstance, songs that lent voice to a put-upon underclass with the empathetic vigour that Woody Guthrie inspired in the young Dylan. Nothing they’ve done before, however, has in this respect been as angrily sustained as it is here, on an album of growling protest and noisy rage, the picaresque adventures of The Felice Brothers replaced by harsher narrative lines.

“Get the boys, turn on the show,” are the album’s opening words. In other circumstances, they may have been an instruction to strike up the band, bellowing entertainment to follow. Here, on a song called “The Big Surprise”, plaintive piano, dolorous bass and drums that sound like someone trying to knock down a wall fall in behind Ian Felice’s weary vocal lead, the group sounding as forlorn as the orchestra on the Titanic, the ship of state The Felice Brothers have been sailing on now listing fatally beneath them, going down with all hands. The track’s eventually exclamatory tone, its forecast of a hard rain coming, is repeatedly echoed on the album, with an accumulative sense of impending calamity reminiscent of “Love And Theft”’s “High Water (For Charley Patton)” or an old blues holler like “When The Levee Breaks” (one of the album’s highlights actually is an old blues holler, a raucous version of Elder Curry’s “Memphis Flu”, a fire-and-brimstone musical sermon about the 1928 influenza pandemic in the South).

The Felice Brothers have previously invited comparisons with The Band, as much for the way they have sometimes looked, as on the cover of Tonight At The Arizona, as for the music they’ve played, which has sometimes recalled Music From Big Pink and The Band. The Band’s influence, which has at times been overstated to the cost of their own unique songwriting talent, is not as immediately apparent here as it was on The Felice Brothers. Key tracks like the wracked waltz of “Buried In Ice”, the eerie, slowly unfolding “Ambulance Man” and whispered lament of “Sailor Song”, for instance, are reminiscent with their woozy, weird clatterings and off-kilter instrumental voicings, of the Tom Waits of Mule Variations.

When The Band are recalled here, it’s not so much the breezy folk and bucolic country of The Basement Tapes that come to mind. “Chicken Wire” and the hugely combustible “Run Chicken Run” are broadly redolent of the loud bracing roar The Band made with Dylan at the January 1968 Tribute To Woody Guthrie concert at Carnegie Hall, when they rocked the joint with raucous versions of “Dear Mrs Roosevelt”, “The Grand Coulee Dam” and “I Ain’t Got No Home”. The latter, especially, would not be out of place here alongside the rowdy, gospel hoe-down of “Penn Station”, where much stomping of feet, rasping harmonica, Cajun fiddle and massed voices hint at the demented exuberance and hysteria of a revivalist church meeting, someone doing stuff with snakes and people talking in tongues.

The bruised heart of Yonder Is The Clock is probably located in four long ballads. The yearning “Katie Dear” is a musical letter home, ostensibly from someone serving time, although it could as easily be a letter to loved ones from a US soldier, sent down the years from anywhere from Valley Forge to Fallujah. “All When We Were Young”, meanwhile, evokes a childhood destroyed by war, the singer’s home-town, which could be Boston or Basra, destroyed by a downpour of bombs, the final minute or so of which is tearfully beautiful. Elsewhere, “Boy From Lawrence County” is about people who kill for money, in this case the bounty for Jesse James, that even friends of the outlaw are tempted by. Even better is the seven-minute “Cooperstown”, a hymn to a vanished America that finds a sad echo in the closing requiem of “Rise And Shine”, the record’s closing track.

As a State of the Union address, this bold and often brilliant record is less inclined towards optimism than, say, Springsteen’s admirable Working On A Dream. Despite the coming of Obama, the record predicts that for many the years ahead will continue to be bleak, to which extent it shares the same concerns for America’s vulnerable sub-classes expressed on parts of Neil Young’s new Fork In The Road, and, from what you hear, the imminent new Dylan album, Neil and Bob among the elite company The Felice Brothers may yet increasingly keep.

ALLAN JONES

Monday, April 13, 2009

Citizen Dick.org review of Yonder is the Clock


I like the idea of how undiscovered bands get record deals. I sometimes have this idealized image of a band toiling away at tiny bars while suited record store execs whisper quietly in conference about whether or not the band is poised for stardom. Of course, I’m well aware this isn’t how it all goes, but it’s at least intriguing to consider the basic premise. We also cover a lot of debut records in our business and I often imagine the immense tension and excitement surrounding a band’s first nationwide release. The interim between discovery and first release is no doubt a whirlwind time for bands, and the uncertainty has to be simply overwhelming. One of the things endearing about discussing independent music is that none of this really matters at this point. What’s ultimately important is that music and artistic creation is always front and center with indie bands. Half of our feature bands still have day jobs and moonlight as aspiring rock gods. We get to follow the progression, from discovery all the way through a band’s stylistic improvement. This is always unique to think about. The Felice Brothers, an upstate NY alt-country outfit has an album hitting the shelves today, and their “discovery” in a NY subway station rattling away at homemade and battered instruments is, at least, a cool ass story. Add in the retro and raucous sound of their sophomore effort, Yonder is the Clock, into the mix and we’ve got a recipe for fun this April.

Yonder is the Clock is successful on two important levels, vibe and instrumental consistency. These brothers have a panache for turning back the clocks to emulate some Woodie Guthrie infused with a modern edge. Lawlessness and sweet southern sentimentality wash this record with a dirty and gravelly layer of value. Ian, Simone, and James Felice all hail from the Catskill Mountain region of New York, and this kind of psuedo-backwoods charm is all over this album. “Penn Station” is the second track on the record, and Ian Felice’s hardened and weathered vocal delivery is purposeful in its true countrfied vibe. To continue the overall vibe, the album meanders through slow burners and washboard banging upbeat tracks. The five-piece was discovered playing at a subway station, and it’s incredibly easy to picture these guys sitting awkwardly in a concrete jungle belting out country jams in an almost stereotypical fashion. It’s tracks like “Run Chicken Run” and “Chicken Wire” that stomp and square dance this strange image home. You know the iconic image of a group of rag tag renegade misfits blowing into milk jugs and banging pots and pans on a country front porch? Yeah, these are those guys. The vibe is harnessed and emitted well here. Nothing tricky, but super delicious in its twang.

Yonder is the ClockThe second major boon to Yonder is the Clock is its storytelling and well rounded lyricism. ”Katie Dear” is a certifiably amazing track about halfway through, connecting plucky synthesizers to heartwarming lyrics. Katie Dear, make me a a road map with those brown old eyes I love . . . I’ll sing you a jailbird song. “Rise and Shine” and “Ambulance Man” are tracks where Ian Felice restrains his vocals and tells stories of yearning. Our best country standards are about grizzled narratives of heartache, and The Felice Brothers certainly keep this convention close to home here.

The danger here is pigeonholing The Felice Brothers into a country quintet spitting out Appalachian jams, as this sells them extremely short. Live show reviews have alluded to energy and humor, but this new release is loaded with instrumental largeness, as well. To put it short, the subway days are long gone and this is an excellent bonus for us. ”Buried in Ice” is a prime example as James and Ian go to town with a dissonant piano intro and violins and rattle-snake shaker percussion creates more than a simple country twang. These guys are keenly aware of arrangement and how it connects to emotional content. Accordion sounds, sweeping synths and entire horn sections are also present. The previously mentioned stomper, “Run Chicken Run” toes the line between square dance and European, fiddling and crashing cymbals all the way to its close. This album works best when all parts of the equation mesh together. Ian’s gravelly, Marlboro Red style vocals, James and Simone’s artistic instrumentation, and added cast members of horns, organs, and fiddles all create a conglomeration that is beyond those early subway performances.

This second full length marks a progression for The Felice Brothers, and while the sound is plucked straight from a time machine, there’s a lot to like in a modern sense. When listening to this album I kind of wish I could have caught an impromptu street-side performance a few years ago. There’s a rich and emotional structure to the construction of the tracks and even on the most mellow songs it’s obvious these guys love what they do. Pick it up today and fall in.

New Song "Marie"

From Boston

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Open Letter from Simone Felice


An open letter from Simone Felice

Dear Friends and Family, this is just a little note to show my deepest gratitude for all the letters and concern I've received over my absence from The Felice Brothers stage over the past few months, and for the boundless love and belief you've shown for our music over the years.

This winter has been a time of tragedy, sadness, and regeneration in my life. I'd been working on a new book and recording some songs with my dear old friend Robert close to home in the Catskill Mountains and my long time love and I were expecting our first child. Then in late January out of the blue we lost our baby girl and it really broke my heart and turned my world inside out. In the process of mourning it helped a lot to turn some of the sorrow and revelation into songs and after a while I came back to Robert and I's cabin/studio to put them down and to finish the other recordings we started.

I've been writing a lot this past year, and seeing as my role in the band was always more of a supportive one (helping with lyrics, drumming, harmonies and the occasional lead vocal) I've been compelled to find a vehicle that would help me be able to share all these new songs and stories. So I hope you like The Duke & The King, the songs mean a lot to us, being as they are, after all, the soundtrack of a long fateful winter. We'll be playing a handful of debut shows come spring, and I'll be working on finishing the novel and spending more time close to home. The boys have a couple great drummers working with them now (chief among them our close friend Jeremy 'The Searcher' who's produced all our records and was one of my most important drum teachers in the long ago, and Dave, an awesome young hitter who I've had the privilege of working with this spring to pass on some of the stank codes of our tradition), and they all have a very strong and dynamite vision of how to carry the music and poetry we've all made together into the future. I'll be making special appearances at Felice shows from time to time to share the stage with my brothers as they support 'Yonder Is The Clock' (our proudest effort to date) and beyond, something I look forward to with an earnest and warm heart.

It's very nice that I can be candid in sharing these heavy life changes with you guys, though the comfort I feel in doing so is no surprise considering how loving and supportive you've been in helping us build this big old crazy family together, a family as sacred as it is rowdy! Please know that it really is you all who've made this never-ending story of ours possible, and that this knowledge has never and will never be lost on me.

posted last week on the Duke and the King blog (sorry it took so long for me to post this but i have been on the road for a week)

Burlington Setlist 4/11





















1. The Big surprise
2. Loves me tenderly
3. Cooperstown
4. Whiskey in my whiskey
5. Captains wife
6. Marie
7. White limo
8. Hey hey revolver
9. Chicken Wire
10. Godamn you jim
11. Memphis flu
12. Boy from Lawrence county
13. Frankies gun
14. I wanna come home
15. Greatest show on earth
16. Run chicken run
17. St stephen's end
18. Two hands
19. Lay me down
20. Lou the welterweight
21. Penn station

Friday, April 10, 2009

Boston setlist April 9


Video Penn Station April 9 2009 Paradise Rock Club Boston

1. The Big Surprise
2. Loves me Tenderly
3. New song
4. Whiskey
5. Murder by Mistletoe
6. White Limo
7. Lou the Welterweight
8. Cooperstown
9. Chicken wire
10. Where'd you get the liquor?
11. Godamn you Jim
12. Marie
13. Greatest Show on Earth
14. Frankies gun
15. Let me come home
16. St Stephen's end
17. Two hands
18. Farley song
19. Ruby Mae
20. Penn Station


Boston Herald review:

Gloomy, gleeful Felice Brothers doomed to rock
By Christopher Blagg
Saturday, April 11, 2009

Never has a band so obsessed with death, dying and decay sounded so joyful.

When the Felice Brothers took the stage at the Paradise on Thursday, a wonderfully maddening tension between doom and revelry was on full display.

With a just-released record, “Yonder Is the Clock,” in tow, the rowdy, five-piece, Americana outfit proved that when it comes to rock ’n’ roll, spirit and soul trump precision every time.

The Catskills-based band got the night moving by ripping into the rambunctious stomp of “Love Me Tenderly,” complete with raggedy harmonies, wheezing accordion and the broken-glass baritone of Ian Felice. The fiddle-fueled honky-tonk of “Whiskey in My Whiskey” proved an early favorite with burly, bearded singer and accordionist James Felice swigging liberally from a bottle. (The third actual brother in the band, drummer Simone, is on hiatus.)

An otherwise excellent first half was marred by the band’s frustrating overreliance on stodgy, lackluster ballads. After every uptempo barnstormer, a momentum-snuffing song, such as the duller than dull “Buried in Ice,” seemed to follow.

Fortunately the band cut down on slow songs as the night went on. Tunes such as the barrelhouse “The Greatest Show On Earth,” the frantic “Where’d You Get Your Liquor?” and the murder-themed “Frankie’s Gun” all teetered deliciously on the edge of chaos.

An extended encore included a cover of Townes Van Zandt’s gospel number “Two Hands” and the Brothers’ own “Penn Station,” another tune that marries morbid themes with cheerful music. The Felice Brothers may be obsessed with death, but when that fixation creates riveting performances like these, more power to ’em.

Indie singer-songwriter Willy Mason, who has toured with Death Cab for Cutie and Radiohead, opened with a solo acoustic set full of literate, anthemic folk rock. Tunes such as “If It’s the End” and “Hard Hand to Hold” were solid, but it was a lovely duet with his folk-singing mother, “Waiter at the Station,” that proved the set’s golden moment.

THE FELICE BROTHERS, with WILLY MASON

At the Paradise, Thursday.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Daily Egyptian Review of Yonder is the Clock


Brothers bask in Bob and The Band
Luke McCormick

lmccorm2@siu.edu




Release Date: 4/6
Record Label: Team Love
Rating: B-

Every year it seems critics attach themselves to a new artist declaring them the “new Dylan.” The Felice Brothers certainly have a great deal in common with Bob, but they are not going to get a Scorsese film made after them.


“Yonder is the Clock” is the fourth album from the Catskills natives and travels the same retro Dylan and The Band path as previous outings.


The band has consistently churned out mid-tempo folk for a few years now and its latest is no different. It is a record full of cuts that would not have been out of place coming out while Dylan was coming up.


The record’s high points come when the brothers pick up the pace a bit. “Run Chicken Run” is the type of foot stomping, country anthem Bright Eyes has been trying to perfect the past couple of records. The Brothers nail it.


“Yonder is the Clock” is a record transported from another time. The sounds are inherently '60s. From the accordion solos to the fiddle playing, this young group’s folk rock is some of the freshest nostalgia being released today.

Simone's "All when we Were Young" video from April 7th

i uploaded to You Tube Yesterday

Frankie's Gunn Video

Video Of Run Chicken Run at Bardovan Opera House

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Album release party April 7 Bardavon Opera House





























































1. The big Surprise
2. Run chicken run
3. Whiskey in my Whiskey
4. Markboro Man
5. Chicken Wire
6. All when we were young
7. Helen Fry
8. Buried in Ice
9. Loves me tenderly
10.Murder by mistletoe
11. Radio song
12. Greatest Show on Earth
13. Godamn you Jim
14. Where'd you get The Liquor
15. Marie
16. Mercy
17. Two hands
18. Lou the welterweight
19. Frankie
20. Cooperstown
21. Let me come home
22. Ruby MAE
23. Penn station

Monday, April 6, 2009

Boston Globe Review


The Felice Brothers Yonder is the Clock
Team Love
ESSENTIAL "All When We Were Young"
The Felice Brothers play the Paradise Rock Club on Thursday.

The new Felice Brothers record has two great songs with the word "chicken" in the title - one of several oddball delights on an album that finds the Catskill Mountains group sounding ever more in command of an unruly tangle of folk, country, and rock. The band does not so much make this record as keep it from flying apart. The intoxicating sound is matched with incisive word play, with the Felices using quirky laments and dark, urban poetry to bridge hillbilly and hipster. Ian Felice doesn't belt out songs; he sneaks them through a back door in your cranium, and the sparse yet jaunty drumming of Simone Felice, wheezy accordion groove from James Felice, propulsive bass lines by Christmas Clapton, and fiddle and washboard playing by Greg Farley provide the tools to pry open that door. The album ignites the imagination with tales of deceit, deception, and death, but the Felice Brothers leaven the grifter vibes with empathy for the underdog. Sure, the guy in "Penn Station" is as good as dead, but the Felices send him off in foot-stomping glory. (Out tomorrow) SCOTT McLENNAN


Album released Tommorrow: Meet The Searcher




Concert goers wondering what happened to drummer, singer, writer and lead brother Simone Felice, have noticed a new face on the drum kit; its Jeremy Backofen, and he is not new to the Felice Brothers. Backofen runs Tranzendance Productions, and has worked as Producer and Engineer for the Felice Brothers since the Iantown record.
Additionally he has worked with "Mshanghai string band", "AA bondy", "Gregory and
the Hawk" and "Gill Landry" from Old Crow Medicine Show and Mice Parade. This is what he had to say
about his initial work with the Felice Brothers, "dirtbags. scumbags
to some,.. i love these guys. they’re unique and difficult to
quantify, but as familiar as a smell of your house. i was first
introduced to them when they had a few songs to record. we did a live
gtr/vocal performance in one evening in bearsville studio B. i thought
what we all thought that night. great songs, great night. that record
became known as "iantown". that was the beginning. the boys started
playing more and more together over the next year and eventually
started a proper band with a bunch of new material. we put together a
triage operation an old estate in Kerhonkson NY that used to be a
shakespeare summer camp. we took up residence in the old cafeteria
which had tons of room and a little stage in the far end. the roof
leaked everywhere, there were piles of mildewy old costumes all over,
crusty mice infested mattresses, the whole place was a bit rugged. we
had to run extension cords for about 100 yards to the nearest building
with power. that is what i powered the entire studio with. during the
next few weeks, we captured some amazing music that became "thru these
reins and gone" and was later released by Loose in england as "Tonight
at the Arizona". those original songs still have the stink of that
room in them. we got struck by lightning. ian never missed a beat,
just kept on going and then the thunder happened below the opening
vocal line. studio gear set up in a lightning storm and we just kept
rolling. brave. we all knew that was the take. we had been in the
studio toiling over the follow up record to arizona and "adventures"
was born. it was all about quickness and vibe. for "Adventues" we set
up in an old chicken coop and cut live. live to 8 track with live
vocals. i didn’t even tweak anything on the fly because i was in the
coop with the band playing percussion. we added a few extras on top of
that, mostly just backup vocals and harmonies, and that was it.

"these days getting to play skins with the boys is one of the greatest
thrills of my life. i've never really considered myself a drummer but
i've always loved to play, so to get an opportunity to play stank
beats in this stank band is so much stank fun you can't even imagine.
there is no other band on the planet that i would rather be playing
drums for. no band. i just go where i'm needed and i'm lucky enough
to have been needed to fill in on beats for a minute. as soon as i'm
needed to cut new hot hits, then i'll be on the other side of the
glass loving that just as much. i'm just thankful to be in the same
room with these guys."

He is considered one of the rising star producers in rock music and is
being considered in some circles to be an heir apparent to mega
producers like Daniel Lanois, Brendan O'Brien and one of his biggest
fans Rick Rubin, although he admits that his greatest inspiration is
Quincy Jones. "when i got to hang out with Q at SXSW, i was on cloud
99. i was thinking ok, i'm here. i'm in the same room as Q. such an
honor. Q is to music what the Dali Lama is to Zen. he's just done so
much and made so many mistakes that he gets it now. he gets the
secret to life, to music, to love. the whole time we were cutting
Yonder i was just constantly studying orchestration, arrangement, and
always picturing myself in the studio with Bruce channeling a scumbag
version of Q, and saying, "ok,..what would dirtbag Q do?"

New York Times Review: Yonder is the Clock


THE FELICE BROTHERS
“Yonder Is the Clock”
(Team Love)

Death and disaster loom in the songs on the Felice Brothers’ latest album, “Yonder Is the Clock.” That’s not new for this Americana band, which includes three brothers from the Catskills town of Palenville, N.Y.: Ian Felice on guitar and lead vocals, James on keyboards and Simone on drums.

Starting with their 2006 debut album, “Through These Reins and Gone,” the Felice Brothers have come up with surreal story-songs about drinking, drugs, heartache and firearms, with hints of a Christian search for faith. Their previous albums were largely on the somber side, steeped in the upstate gravity of the Band.

But on “Yonder Is the Clock,” the Felice Brothers loosen up, making room for absurdity as well as the travails they sing about. The opening song, “The Big Surprise,” holds both; the only sure thing is that the surprise won’t be a happy one.


With a voice that’s in the wheezy territory of Bob Dylan, sometimes straying toward Tom Waits, Ian Felice can sound haggard and weary or so punch-drunk that nothing could faze him further. “I died in Penn Station tonight,” he sings in “Penn Station,” with his voice leaping into a wobbly falsetto on “died.” He has to choose between trains bound for heaven or hell.

In “Chicken Wire” he sings, “Very soon I will be/In the deep blue sea/Wrapped in chicken wire/By my own device,” to a shuffle beat that clatters and ratchets as if the words were much more jovial. The dangerous characters in “Run Chicken Run” — “She’s the fairest of them all/She loves her Adderall/She’s kicking out the windows of your car” — arrive with a rockabilly backbeat, pumping accordion and hints of Cajun fiddle.

There are slower songs too, haunted by mortality, like “Sailor Song,” a waltz about the toll of war, or “Ambulance Man” and “Rise and Shine,” two deathbed vigils. They’re as serious as ever, but less steadfastly morose. On “Yonder Is the Clock,” it seems, there’s always a honky-tonk just down the road from the hospital.

Friday, April 3, 2009

Wxpn Philly free at noon setlist


































































































1. The Big Surprise
2. Memphis Flu
3. Boy from Lawrence county
4. Marie: James says "this is a love song that doesn't go anywhere" First verse sung by James, second sung by Greg Farley, third by Ian. Very nice performance.
5. Run Chicken Run
6. Let Me Come Home: James "This is a very tender song". James lead vocal.


Pretty good set of all new songs and Marie and Let Me come Home make another appearance. Boy from Lawrence County appeared to be an audible, and surprisingly no Penn Station.

here the full set here http://www.npr.org/templates/player/mediaPlayer.html?action=1&t=1&islist=false&id=102654942&m=102715914


Thanks to Joel Grossman at Backstreets for the tickets.
Thanks to Tony Lukes for the Roast Pork and Spinach Cheesesteak


video excerpts of show available here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sSCUjBSzMkQ


Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Yonder is the Clock Full review






















The Band: The Felice Brothers
Players: Ian Felice-Guitar and vocals
James Felice- Accordian, Organ, Piano, vocals
Simone Felice-Percussion, vocals
Christmas Clapton-Bass, vocals
Farley-Fiddle, Percussion, Washboard, vocals

Yonder is the Clock is the new album by the Felice Brothers, released on Team Love Records, due to hit stores on April 7. The title, drawn from the Mark Twain story "the Mysterious Stranger", in which Satan jokes to a blacksmith, that both the Stoned and the Stoner, have their time, and Satan has an eternity to enjoy himself. For the characters on Yonder is the Clock, time is nearly up; the Sailor lost in a terrible storm, The jailed soldier, the cheated lover, and the American empire. Unlike the self-titled release of 2008, this collection of songs are almost completely loaded with hopelessness, in the battle for peoples souls, the devil is winning.

Track 1: The Big Surpise: A quiet ballad in the vein of St. Stephen's End, about a jilted lover on the brink of doing something unspeakable to his paramour. Ian whispers, " The Jazzy Band has lost its swing, the revolution has lost its dream. When all your love has been a lie, its the day of the Big Surprise".

Track 2: Penn Station: A classic train-going-to-heaven metaphor, about a John Doe, dying on the floor in Penn Station, amidst train sounds, a chorus of "Whoo-hoo" and fiddles and accordian. This live tour de force translates very well onto vinyl. Ranks as a near equal to Frankie's Gun as a catchy single. Ian sings " With a toothbrush and a comb, five dollars and a dead cell phone, no photo id", setting the stage for the nameless victim and his souls race to get on the number 7 train to heaven, while a train, with Satan at the helm, is nipping at his heels.

Track 3: Buried In Ice: This number finds Christmas on lead vocal singing the woes of a cryogenically frozen man, out of his time, lonely and lost, and questioning the morality of those who made it possible. Christmas creaky voice asks "Professor what kind of miracle is this? you should be careful just what you wish for"

Track 4: Chicken Wire: The long circulated tune known from the Daytrotter Sessions, gets a major push from the band, and is far more uptempo here, Like Bill Haley and the Comets, "Rock Around the Clock", that is if it were about a invalid man fantasizing about wrapping himself in chicken wire and being dumped into the sea and being eaten by sharks. A very strong track with a great organ provided by James Felice.

Track 5: Ambulance Man: Ian crying out "Here comes the rain", with accordian washing over his melody. At the end of the song it builds so that amongst the carnival feel of the accordian, Ian is begging the Ambulance man for a ride.

Track 6: Sailor Song: virtually unrecognizable lyrics sung by James Felice. About a sailor lost in a storm, physically and spiritually cast adrift. Beautiful piano intro and its propelled by accordain throughout. Almost a solo song, where the sailor reflects that his kind do not get a burial like his land dwelling comrades

Track 7: Katie Dear: A great rendition of the traditional folk song. Very touching ballad of a man writing a song for his beloved, Ian sings "Katie dear, draw me a road map, with those brown ole eyes I love". Again the character is isolated from his loved ones. Sounds like a Levon Helm track for sure.

Track 8: Run Chicken Run: Ian sings about a man run afoul with a well connected madame, and is hounded by knife wielding Bronx man and a pipe bomb toting woman, featuring the closest thing the band has ever had to a guitar solo. Fast paced barn burner, well suited for the live show.

Track 9: All When We Were Young: Simone takes the lead vocal in maybe the most political song they have done yet (at least as the Felice Brothers). In this ballad, Simone's beautiful voice cries, "Where'd those planes come from, that burned my city in all that smoke and ash?" . "Sometimes the things you do, they come back at you."

Track 10: Boy From Lawrence County: Drug dealers and users, betrayed friendships, murder and mystery? Sounds familiar? One of the best tracks they ever laid down. This epic tale of of a loser, turning on a friend plays like cinema and ranks with Hey Hey Revolver and Lou the Welterweight as the best work this band has done. Expertly sung by Ian with the sad refrain "Tell me Judge, whats the bounty, on the boy from Lawrence County? He's a friend of mine. If I had a way to trap him, would you pay up captain? He's a friend of mine".

Track 11: Memphis Flu: too loose. Unlike "Take This Hammer" which was endearing and driven by Ian's vocal, this is the sound of a drunken party. Most of the vocals are unrecognizable. This one missed the mark, but remains a great live number.

Track 12: Cooperstown: Another tale, centered around baseball and Ty Cobb, that focuses on the seperation between us and people isolated from one another. Ian cries " I'm on First and your on Third, and the wolves are in between ".

Track 13: Rise and Shine: Again someone's time is up, and in this case its a very close friend, a blood brother apparently, who share his last moments. Beautiful song.

Overall, its a more complete effort than the last album, but with less lyrical cleverness, and a much darker (if thats possible) feel.

Monday, March 30, 2009

New CD in our possession!!


1. The Big Surprise
2. Penn Station
3. Buried in Ice
4. Chicken Wire
5. Ambulance Man
6. Sailor Song
7. Katie Dear
8. Run Chicken Run
9. All When We Were Young
10. Boy from Lawrence County
11. Memphis Flu
12. Cooperstown
13. Rise and Shine

Need another full day to totally absorb it. The surprising gem on this album is so far.."the Boy From Lawrence County", it appears to be a classic in the mold of Rockefeller Drug Law Blues

Saturday, March 28, 2009

A Look Back: The Big Empty Simone Felice, Ian Felice, Doctor Brown, Robert Burke

from Chronogram.com 2003
Emerging from the Void:
The Big Empty Rages Against the Regime
By Sharon Nichols; Photos by Megan McQuade

The moment of conception. A silver night train sails on from Florence to Paris. In the confined space of a sleeper car, two American brothers, entranced by the hum, burn the midnight oil behind dusty red curtains. The elder is a poet, the younger a painter. Sipping wine, the brothers write furiously into the night: The hospital’s filled with the people’s disease/And we’ve run out of pills/But the secret police are in the bloodstream of everyone/In the free world/And the naked sun/Will burn until we hide it away. The embryo.

The painter hovers over a shiny black baby grand, extracting melancholy chords from the instrument’s hollow. The poet behind the mike is in his own movie, stomping furiously, singing, his head lurching on his neck like that of a shaken rag doll. His eyes bulge. He flaps his arms like a mad bird. He wipes the mike across his face. The poet pushes it out:
Moscow how does it feel to be a dead superpower?/Poor superpower/I remember your curtain years/You must be lonely/You won’t be lonely for long.

The crowd screams and pounds their feet on the wooden floor. Applause for the midwife. The Big Empty is born.

A Word’s Worth
Simone Felice is big on quotes. He’s got a thing for words, this poet, this spokesperson and chief emoter for the newborn band The Big Empty. He and his band members have an ongoing love affair with political commentary, and he relates two lines to me, lines from what he calls “two American literary giants.” The first is from Moby Dick.
“The killer is never hunted,” Felice recites from memory. “I never heard what sort of oil he has. Exception might be taken to the name bestowed upon this whale, on the grounds of its indistinctness. For we are all killers, on land and on sea.” Felice continues. “Melville is describing the respective species of whales worldwide, and he’s describing the killer whale. I read the line like 400 times, it hit me so hard.”

Felice’s second quote is from a man he calls Pure Immaculate George W.

“I heard him discussing the importance of a pre-emptive strike upon the desert nation of Iraq, and he delivered a statement that basically threw me to the ground. It goes like this.” Pause. Impersonation: “He tried to kill my daddy.” Felice laughs quietly.

The Big Empty. The name isn’t hard to figure out. It’s the sky above our heads. It’s the void we’re spinning in. It’s the barren, desolate place in the heart of mankind and in the American Dream. It’s something different to everyone because each has his own empty place inside. Add to the essence of that void a slowcore sound. Not the grinding of Mother Earth on her axis, but an unhurried Pink Floydesque mix of introspective mellows and consistently potent musical excursions that are sensitive enough to haunt you, yet painful enough to stain your mind. These boys spade through the soil of your most troubled imaginings. It might come as a surprise to the uninitiated—this is heavy-duty stuff.

Unlike most musicians, these cats are fueled by words. The band consists of three eloquent wordsmiths: “Doctor” Sean Brown and Ian and Simone Felice. Their lyrics are driven by beauty and loss, which they view as one and the same. They expound on weighty themes such as politics and love. “The hearts of man haven’t changed in all these millions of years,” says the front man. “We need, we fall in love, we dream, we sing, and we tear each other to pieces. There’s a fire inside us, and without that fire, man is naked and low. Fire is contained within all our proud creations—the gasoline engine, the hydrogen bomb. Fire gives mankind its meaning. And fire is the thing that will blow us apart.”
Between rehearsals, the band members continue to weave words—they adopt southern accents and pretend to play Scrabble to keep each other entertained. The players: Pure W and Uncle Cheney. Pure W hatches such words as “Tex” and “Jeb”. Uncle Cheney’s words are significantly larger: “Corporate Takeover” and “Biological Warfare.” “Tex is not a word, W,” complains Uncle Cheney. Pure W retorts, “Mark it down, Uncle Cheney! That’s six points!”

Fire In The House
Simone Felice sways in his ripped denim shirt at The Big Empty’s debut performance at Woodstock’s Colony Cafe on October 12. No one has yet heard this work aside from the band itself. The room seems a temple with its many burning candles, and 100-or-so listeners pack the building on a night when cold rain pelts the roof. Felice dedicates two love songs. One is for Uncle Cheney, the other is for Pure Immaculate Imperial All-Knowing W. Young brother Ian’s playing is passionate, tear-jerking. The poet stands offstage in the audience observing his boys, then steps on and delivers his oracle.

Leaders are ugly/Paper blood and counterfeit hearts/I’ve got no love for the government/I can’t believe in their adequate counterfeit/ I’ve been sick all my life to see/To see their holy gold overthrown.

Felice’s occasional twitching is reminiscent of a young David Byrne. He clutches his skull then extends his arms, giving the sign: a two-handed “W”.

Wouldn’t it kill you to apologize?/There’s no use in pulling out your eyes/You’ll never see them suffering/But you never seen them peering through dirty fences/How could you see their multitude through your dirty lenses?

Ian’s Dylanesque vocals take over. The vibe is unhappy, hungry. You can feel it in the music, and the words, and the space between the words.

I don’t have the grace to walk through this world the way you want me to/There’s a monster in my side and a hostage in my spine/When I hold myself up to the light.

Felice reaches two arms out to his brother in petition, then up to heaven. He holds himself as he sings his tempest. Doctor Brown, eyes closed, whacks the drums, shaking the very foundation of the room. These guys are pissed. Felice begins jumping, jerking. Lady Liberty is on the pyre.

Laugh until you’re blue at the blood in my eyes/You’re nothing but a whore to me, my love/My love/You kill the angels/Oh, my love.

At its climax, the room buzzes with energy. Felice kisses his brother on the heads. “I feel vindicated,” he utters into the mike.

Old Ghosts
The brothers Felice and Doctor Brown have been working feverishly in 2002 to complete their self-titled, 12-track debut CD. It will be recorded at Iiwii Studios in New York City in the last week of October and released on Superstar Records in December. One day, two takes for each song, antique mikes, all live, no overdubs. But perhaps the most noteworthy detail is that the album will be recorded with the piano John Lennon used when recording “Imagine”.

“Most of The Big Empty’s songs are piano-based,” explains Simone, “so I told our producer we needed a really nice piano, and he found this one. It really means a lot to us, and it was a deciding factor because we have such a great love for John Lennon. We’re gonna pull the ghosts from the room and from the streets in the city, we’re gonna pull the ghosts out of that piano and out of ourselves, and we’re gonna lay it down.”

Ian’s studies of painting in Italy and New York City drove him to set up his own art studio in Palenville. A self-taught musician, the 20-year-old also plays piano, acoustic guitar, harmonica, and bagpipes, sings harmony, and writes a good portion of the lyrics for The Big Empty. When he’s not writing, performing, or painting, he’s traveling the world or adventuring in the great outdoors with his brother.

A popular Woodstock poet, Simone Felice, author of The Picture Show, has delivered his words on the BBC to critical acclaim with poet Ainsley Burroughs, and has fronted and recorded CDs with several bands: Television Baby, Fuzz Deluxe, Prophet, Odd City. His second book of prose and poetry, Tomorrow Will Come, is complete, and he’s working toward a master’s degree in creative writing at Empire State College so he can teach poetry. As the charismatic leader of The Big Empty, the 26-year-old provides a mesmerizing stage presence for which he is well known, but he’d like to put his old ghosts behind him. “What we’re doing with The Big Empty is what I’ve been waiting to do my whole life,” he says. “I’m able to work with my brother, my best friend. We have something between us that is ancient and profound. Only recently in working with him do I feel I’ve found my true voice as a singer. I’ve always been able to write words. But aside from my prose, this project is what I’m bleeding on from now to the end of time.”

Doctor Brown and Ian have been friends since childhood, so Brown is like a third brother to the Felices. He plays drums, acoustic guitar, and harmonica, provides vocal harmony, and composes with the group. His other creative endeavor is that of amateur wine and beer making. In a basement wine cellar that smells like a cave, he brews crazy apple wine and voluminous bottles of hard cider and beer. He’s the scientist, the technician, the doctor of the band, grounding everyone and figuring things out. An outdoorsman, he also studies forestry. Together the three men rehearse in their studio in Palenville, a sanctuary in the woods on the Kaaterskill Creek where they can work and feel at peace, isolated from the red, white, and blue while at the same time penning songs about it.

The man who found Lennon’s piano is producer is Robert “Chicken” Burke, probably best known as the producer for George Clinton and his own band, Drugs. He’s The Big Empty’s “modern day dirty magician,” a man who can pull up the spirits. Burke shares a studio in Chichester with bassist Adam Widoff, who plays and writes bass lines with The Big Empty. Known for his work with Lenny Kravitz, Madonna, and the B-52s, Widoff is also acting as co-producer. Widoff is a member of Drugs and plays electric guitar, piano, and clavinet. The band also enlists Justin Trushell and his ‘80s vintage Roland Juno for the CD and live gigs, adding a subtle etheric vibe to several songs. A DJ, Trushell produces and creates dance and techno music from his own Palenville studio. He’s been friends with Simone since they learned to walk, and the pair have traveled Europe together. Another long-time friend, John Brown, has been in the picture since the fourth grade bus stop. He fills in as drummer when Doctor Brown is on guitar. He and Felice have performed in bands together since they started out in grandpa’s barn. As a comrade in the outer ensemble, The Big Empty wouldn’t be complete without him.

Politics are not only embedded in the band’s lyrics, but in the album artwork as well. The cover will be printed in deep red, as that of Soviet propaganda. The bald focus is on the three words—”the”, “big”, and “empty”—lined up much like those Scrabble board pieces. The words were conscientiously extracted and copied from a particular book and took the boys three or four hours of skimming to locate. They have their own agenda for this. The book, which they’d rather not name for copyright reasons, is a dark masterpiece which has torn them apart and shaped the way they feel about destiny and humankind.

“The people who have the power,” continues the front man, “these are aliens. All they care about is self-preservation. They would throw their own mothers in a fire to save themselves and their oil.”

This new musical project of beauty and loss, revolution and hope, angst and abstraction is aching to be heard. They will unleash their ghosts for the second time at a CD release party on Friday, December 13, at The Uptown in Kingston. On December 19, they will perform at Joyous Lake in Woodstock for WDST Live Sessions. For more information, call The Uptown at 339-8440.
I am looking for a copy of The Big Empty if anyone can help!

Friday, March 27, 2009

Envy Magazine review of Yonder is the Clock


The Felice Brothers
Yonder Is The Clock

With its release coming hot on the heels of their self-titled 2008 debut (which earned comparisons with similarly arty folk-rockers Kings of Leon and The Avett Brothers), it would’ve been easy for The Felice Brothers to simply dump all of their unreleased material onto Yonder Is The Clock and call it a day.

Instead, their sophomore effort is both more cohesive and diverse than its predecessor. On “The Big Surprise,” Ian’s lazy river delivery and the backwoods ambience make it clear that the Brothers want listeners to be sucked into their old-timey universe. This isn’t music one just listens to; it’s music to get lost in.

Other highlights include the eerie “Ambulance Man” and full-bellied celebrations “Run Chicken Run” and “Penn Station,” which has wonderful two-part harmonies. The Brother’s can do a Tom Waits thing (“Sailor Song”) and tug the heartstrings (“Boy From Lawrence County”) with equal aplomb. There is even an ambitious state-of-the-nation composition in “Cooperstown,” which is the group’s most successful crack at long-form narrative songwriting.

Like The Felice’s last release, Yonder could use a few faster numbers to pace the mournful ballads that dominate the B side. But there isn’t one bad or repetitive song, and on additional listens the album gains appreciable replay value. The Felice Brothers have shown they have staying power.
-Jack Frink

Pictures from Buffalo 3/14







Provided by Christa: thanks again!

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Spin.com review 3.5 stars



Plenty of young indie acts pay lip service to the fuck-you spirit of Bob Dylan’s mid- '60s pairing with the Band (then called the Hawks), but precious few honor the raggedy-ass electric folk that they hooked up together. On the Felice Brothers' second album for Conor Oberst's Team Love label, these Catskills boys do just that, playing songs about cops on the take and dying in Penn Station with a hurtling forward motion that prevents the music from sounding (entirely) like a book report. Killer accordion solos, too

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Felice Brothers at Radio Radio Indy March 16

1. Run Chicken Run
2. Greatest Show on Earth
3. Murder By Mistletoe
4. Whiskey in my Whiskey: Farley asks "what's this song about?" James, "Drinking Whiskey and killing your woman!"
5. Marlboro Man: Farley again asks, "What's this song about?" Ian, "This is a very personal song about a man dying of cancer".
6. Chicken Wire: Ian, "Another song about an invalid on his death bed".
7. Cypress Grove: Ian, "Spooky blues number by the great Skip James, its either Skip James or Bon Jovi."
8. White Limo: Ian, "this is a heavy metal song, so".
9. Let Me Come Home: Ian, "this is a very tender, tender, tender song about a prodigal son who wants to come home."Farley, " come up close, you got to hear these words, let em touch you all over". James on lead vocal, reminiscent of Christmas Song.
10. Loves me Tenderly: Best version i've heard yet.
11. Goddamn You Jim
12. Hey Hey Revolver
13. Galilee
14. Marie: lots of trading vocals
15. Take this Bread: Clapping fans drive this song along.
16. Frankie's Gun: sounding very Ska'ish
17. Where'd You get the Liquor?
18. St Stephens End
19. Two Hands: Ian, This is a song by the late great Townes Van Zandt.
20 Penn Station.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Felice Brothers at SXSW Lucero Picnic

Show review:
Hardcore fans hail the Felice Brothers as Americana’s second coming. Call them urban saviors of the jeans and T-shirt crowd.

Perhaps. New York’s most forward-thinking roots rockers absolutely combusted Habana Bar Friday night. Rising crowd tension — the joint was stuffed unmercifully, compounded by literally overflowing outhouses (only one per sex) and a single drink station — fueled its fire. “Hello, friends and family,” lead singer James Felice howled against a tide of white-hot enthusiasm. “This song’s about drinking whiskey and killing your woman. C’mon, boys!”

Unhinged enthusiasm immediately backed the band’s reputation. Beer drinkers and hell raisers united blissfully. The road went on and the party never ended. Clearly, these folks weren’t new to the show.

But Friday afternoon’s appearance at the Lucero Family Picnic at the Dirty Dog - before everything grew a touch worse for the wear, the band drinking Lone Star tallboys like water - better showcased the Felice Brothers’ recent artistic strides. Material from the forthcoming masterwork “Yonder is the Clock” both torpedoed hearts and shook homes. Easy highlights like the scattershot country blues “Run, Chicken, Run” and “Ambulance Man” offered brilliant Southern Gothic narratives.

Real American idols provide faith to the hopeless and eternity to the lifeless. “Oh, how sweetly I do sleep on the bathroom tile where the porter sweeps,” James warbles and moans on the profoundly poignant “Penn Station.” “With a nickel in my hand like the star of Bethlehem.” Few eulogies chill as deeply. Austin360