We went a bit under the radar to soft release our first album! You can check it out via the link. Special thanks to Benjamin Ridley, Mathew Kennedy, Crowe Effects, our family, friends and fans.
We went a bit under the radar to soft release our first album! You can check it out via the link. Special thanks to Benjamin Ridley, Mathew Kennedy, Crowe Effects, our family, friends and fans.
We went to Syracuse on Monday to Open for Crystal Garden ft. Boyd Tinsley at Funk n’ Waffles… We got to hang with the man himself, meet Crystal garden, a couple members of Sophistafunk and get down for a sold out show.
As some of you know, we’ve been doing a string of shows with the fantastic Barroom Philosophers. Played in Oswego, and Burdett NY. This weekend we are headed to Rochester! Do us a favor, and check out their website, like their social media, and find yourselves immersed in their awesomeness.
We have been asked back to the Rongovian Embassy to share a bill with Melvin Seals… We cannot be more excited.
If effects pedals suite your fancy, we encourage you to head on over to http://croweeffects.com/ We have begun working with Tim to figure out how to expand our sound. With an awesome variety, and brick solid pedals we couldn’t be happier being endorsed by such an awesome company.
With the wild summer we’ve been having, keeping up on keeping you up to date is not always easy! As of today, the event’s on our page have been updated with of course more to be announced! Share with your friends, associates, family, and enemies, we’ll see you all on the road.
We had the pleasure of being interviewed by the Ithaca Times.
You can check out the full article at (http://www.ithaca.com/entertainment/music/st-vith-at-the-rongo/article_f5947aac-5421-11e6-9161-8f4f803fd5f0.html) But here is the introduction.
“Conjuring the kind of image-behind-the-veil kaleidoscopic trance of America’s first wave of psychedelic rock bands, Hammondsport’s retro-hued St. Vith, forge the acid tones and bluesy stillness of yesteryear, happily searching the universe for that sacred ether of the mystical sixties. With numbers that run vibrant and loose, echoing a belief in a time, a place, and a destination, they lull you into a haze of jazzy tranquility, happily extending original compositions, Grateful Dead covers, and beatnik dreamscapes…” – Christopher J. Harrington (Ithaca Times)