• EVENTS
  • ABOUT US
  • HELP CENTER
  • SIGN UP
  • LOG IN
  • JOIN US/LOG IN
You are here: Home / Archives for Shannon Duvall

youbloom | HEADROOM #2: Featured Artists from the Los Angeles 2015 Music Festival

28-Oct-2015 By Shannon Duvall

There’s nothing quite as devilish as a little dish, is there?

You know it’s true, otherwise, you wouldn’t be here at HEADROOM, the official source of all dirt dug on the artists who’ll be tearing up the stages of this December’s youbloom LA 2015 Music Festival . We’ve got over 50 bands lined up already for this winter’s hottest fest, and with that much rock ‘n’ roll in one place, there’s bound to be something juicy to unearth.

In my other job, as youbloom‘s very own private eye, I’ve learned a thing or two about a thing or two, and before I burst at the seams, I invite you to sit down, take a load off, and bask in a little of the gossy stuff – all horse’s mouth, scout’s honor.

You know how first bands can make or break you, musically speaking? Somehow, these all led to make.

Kevin Direct Divide

Kevin Proctor (songwriter/keys/guitar, Direct Divide): My first band was a group of fellow football players and bored teenagers who played Ted Nugent, Metallica and Slayer covers. We were called War Dance and definitely should have had one of those logos that just looks like a leafless tree. SO METAL! My second band sounded a lot like Hootie and the Blowfish.

Razz Direct Divide

Razz: (songwriter/vox/violin): My first band was an all-girl pop punk quartet called the BlowUpDollz. Think 90’s pop punk meets 80’s hair metal and you’ve got the gist. I LOVED that band; we were underage, unapologetic troublemakers sneaking into dive bars to play gigs. We are all still very good friends even though the band isn’t together anymore. We just had a reunion show this year that was hilarious. I definitely learned a lot about stage presence and antics from that group.

It’s a curious thing, the electric violin. At once impossible to ignore and signature (what would The Who’s “Baba O’Reilly” be without it?), it’s a rarity in rock and pop music; its full range of sounds as yet uncharted in the more well-known genres. Putting it front and center are what Direct Divide do, which is both brave and intriguing, their unique sound complemented by tight rhythms, searing vocals, and intelligently placed guitar melodies. For fans of: Lourds, Grace Potter & the Nocturnals, Andrew Bird’s darker stuff

 

BJ Smith

BJ Smith: When I was 17, I met up with another male vocalist and two female vocalists through a friend of my parents who managed bands. We used to toy around singing songs a capella, and quickly formed a vocal group called Black Suede. Our manager said we needed a band and knew of one looking for a vocalist. We went to Santa Ana, California to meet up with this band (they called themselves Oasis, but not the Oasis you’re thinking of). We walked into the rehearsal – they sounded great! They were funky!! They had a conga player, a dude with timbales, synths, a sax player, and a drummer with electronic triggers. They were groovin’ all the funk and R&B jams you heard on black radio stations. I was in awe, like, damn this is the S#+t! Then out of nowhere, their manager and bass player started arguing. They knuckled up and started straight out brawling! We stood there in amazement; we’d rehearsed on our way there, but still had not sung a note! When the fight was over, the bass player grabbed his gear and left, and so did half the band. It was all over before it even started. A few weeks later we came back, they had a few new members and we did our first gig together in LA. We didn’t have a sound man, our mics were feeding back…we thought we sounded great until we were done, and the DJ started spinning the songs we’d just played as a way to mock us! That was last gig Oasis featuring Black Suede ever did; nevertheless, I got the bug, and the rest was history!

Cool, clever, and impassioned, the masterly BJ Smith has the kind of industry chops you hear whispered about across the bartop when he walks into the room. He produces. He sings and plays. He writes songs. He tours with top brass; picks his own band members; slides an R&B song your way like passing a love note. He’s impeccable. Don’t miss him. For fans of: Luther Vandross, Freddie Jackson, your own heartbeat

 

Kirk Round 12

Brian Kirk (drums, Round 12): The first band I was in was with my two cousins who lived 35 and 120 miles away. We would practice once a month (if we were lucky). We were a “christian punk” band and we were booed off stage at our first performance.

A truly eclectic band if ever there was one. Vocals are raw and obstinate. Instrumental phrases seem cobbled together by a deranged Gepetto who was listening to Motorhead at the time. You can bang your head one minute, sway drunkenly the next. It’s capable, engaging, and likeable, as if it can’t be restrained by just one choice. For fans of: Frank Zappa, Stiff Little Fingers, Van Der Graaf Generator (we know)

 

Matthew Foreign Affair NI

Matthew Irwin (rhythm guitar/lead vox, Foreign Affairs NI): The first band I was in didn’t have a name. When I was 15 I was desperate to create my own music and play punk rock songs in any way I could! So I got into contact with a few friends on social media and we jammed and unsuccessfully played one show! We didn’t have a drummer so we borrowed another bands’ and he arrived late and too drunk to hold a beat! I was also a massive cringe –  it was all very embarrassing. However, it did make me feel cool at the time so it wasn’t the worst thing in the world.

An ardent, sincere take on a well-loved genre. Sounds are clean and tight. There’s energy and storytelling in spades. Foreign Affairs NI show up with their hearts on their sleeves, ready to sleep on your kitchen floor if you’ll let them play a gig. This is how the best pop punk should be. For fans of: The Ataris, You Know The Drill, The Get Up Kids

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Artist Discovery, Independent Musicians, Interviews, youbloomLA Tagged With: 2015, band interview, community, DIY, featuredartists, HEADROOM, live gigs, live music, los angeles, music, music conference, music festival, music industry, music industry news, music scene, musicians, spotlight, youbloomLA2015

youbloom | HEADROOM #1: Featured Artists from the Los Angeles 2015 Music Festival

22-Oct-2015 By Shannon Duvall

Welcome back to the HEADROOM! The only place on the web where music freaks such as yourselves can get acquainted with unsigned bands before they hit the stages of the youbloomLA 2015 Music Festival.

Here at HEADROOM, we take pride in our poking and prodding abilities. We’re bona. fide. gossip merchants, born at your great auntie Joan’s kitchen phone and raised by one too many Q&A pages in rock’n’roll magazines.

We like the dirt.  The skinny.  The real weird stuff.

And we make one heck of a great cup of tea.

 

It’s no secret that rock bands – and musicians of all genres, really – have no shortage of strange and positively indecent stories to tell. I mean, the people, the places, the…the… hairstyles!

It’s…scandalous altogether.

So pull up a chair, really, honey, it’s no trouble. And just wait til you hear this…

 

We asked artists to tell us about the first experiences they had with music (hey, we all have to start somewhere). Here’s what a few of them had to say:

On the horn. Cooper. The Ultra Violent Rays

 “My first experience with playing music was in the after school band program at my elementary school in Tacoma, WA. I played the flute. I remember the magic feeling of learning my first song and playing it with the other band musicians. I’m sure we sounded terrible; all us seven year olds blowing away on our horns. But to me it sounded like the best noise in the world.” – Cooper, (bass & vox, The Ultra Violent Rays)

Mirror, mirror, on the wall: who’s the noirest of them all? The Ultra Violent Rays aren’t exactly violent, but they do craft a masterful, cold sultry sound that promises something hot-blooded despite being surrounded by a kind of endless chill. Lovingly produced, carefully communicated electro-class for the space rogue in all of us. For fans of: Joy Division, Gary Numan, Patti Smith

 

Offbeat influence. Jim Priest.

“My first experience was the result of a worn out bearing in our washing machine when I was a kid. Every time it went into the spin cycle it produced ethereal poly-rhythms I only recognized years later when I heard Fela Kuti and Ginger Baker. Eventually the damn thing just broke, but by that time I had discovered Slayer.” – Jim Priest, (singer/songwriter/storyteller)

Hypnotic acoustic guitar meets wrong side of the tracks storytelling, leading us down a dark alley of spoken-word intrigue; it’s tangible, like a newspaper headline – we wonder where it all went wrong. Jagged harmonicas tear in, reminding us that we’re only listeners, but we’re involved, affected all the same. Jim Priest is not to be missed.  For fans of: Tom Waits, Loudoun Wainwright III, Sage Francis

 

Eric Rabid Young

“When I was younger, I had older cousins who listened to super heavy music, and it was crazy to me! Up to that point I’d only heard music that was on the radio. I probably didn’t exactly “get it” because I was too young, but I think even on a subconscious level I had a switch go off that there was a whole world of different music out there that wasn’t mainstream. That’s probably when music “discovery” started for me. I actually went in search of different music that excited me instead of just listening to whatever was available or on the radio and MTV.” – Eric Rickey (vox & songwriter, Rabid Young)

Dreamy and wistful yet energetic and soulful electro-indie made in Vegas, baby. Expect to be filled with a nostalgia for a time and place you were never part of. Impressive stuff when a band can do that. For fans of: Imagine Dragons (kind of), Grouplove, eighties guy/gal duos

 

Prada Gino Cork Boyz

“I was introduced to music when I was a freshman in high school. I moved into a lower income complex where I (made) friend from Little Rock, Arkansas, who was very passionate about poetry and music. I had a karaoke machine in my bedroom that we would put cassette tapes into and record ourselves singing. Eventually this grew into songwriting for us and we recorded a track called “The Anthem”. I continued to pursue music throughout high school until it became my main career goal.” – Anthony Greene (sick rhymes, Prada Gino)

Sincere prose is woven through thoughtfully chosen samples and surprisingly sultry and classy beats. Belongs on a list of the top intellectual rappers in the game. Hometown Chicago oughtta be proud. For fans of: Kid Cudi, Illogic, Eyedea & Abilities

 

julianrender

“My first conscious experience with music was at three; my dad used to drive a lot to every place me and my little brother needed to be, and when we went to the playground or preschool he’d play some cassettes from Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones, Queen or The Beatles (I cared more for Transformers at the time). We were exposed to lots of music, and sometimes went “off the road”. At age 10, someone gave us a Spice Girls tape, and as soon as we pressed play, my dad turned off the radio and gave me my own first tape, Kiss, Alive 4. From then on it’s been nothing but rock and roll.” – Julián (lead vox & guitar, RendeR)

All the way from Chile, with commercial sensibility coming out of their eyeballs, RendeR are polished, tight, and they know their genre like nobody’s business. Headbangers welcome. *Heads up! It’s in Spanish. For fans of: Frequency 54, Underwhelmed, Staind

 

 

*Please note: at this time, individual showtimes and venues have not all been confirmed. We’ll update this blog as soon as they are!

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Artist Discovery, Independent Musicians, Interviews, youbloomLA Tagged With: CA, california, DIY music, featured artists, la, live music, los angeles, music conference, music festival, music industry, youbloomLA2015

First Listen | Artists playing the youbloomLA 2015 Music Festival

15-Oct-2015 By Shannon Duvall

los angeles at nightAh, Los Angeles.

That great meeting of desert and sea, where razzle dazzle meets dusty trail, heartbreak meets lucky break, and practically everything has the potential to be seismic.

Few towns on earth can boast such creative corpulence; the talents of this town run the streets, they walk the beat. They create a hum, if you’re listening: it’s unmistakable.

At youbloom we know all about the treasures waiting to be found on any given Los Feliz or Silver Lake night, in any of the endless bars, clubs, and venues. After all, LA is our home away from home.

 

As such, we’re extremely proud to be returning for another year to host the youbloom LA 2015 Music Festival & Conference. We’ve got three days of music and industry guidance lined up and ready to roll. If you thought the summer was hot, heads up!

There are speakers you can’t afford to miss. There are bands who are going to seriously up your listening game. And there’s the chance to show your colors and come be part of the global music village.

We’re chomping at the bit.

Can’t wait to see you there. In the meantime, do your ears a favor and have yourself an exclusive listen to just a few of the artists in the lineup. Gig listings released soon, so stay tuned!

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Artist Discovery, Fans, Independent Musicians, youbloomLA Tagged With: live gigs, live music, los angeles, music festival, nela, playlist, silver lake, youbloomLA2015

How to Totally Suck at Touring

08-Oct-2015 By Shannon Duvall

Don’t bring merch. Alison Shaw summed it up perfectly in August for youbloomTV:  if a person (likely in a state of inebriation) who has never seen you before decides they like what they hear, they’re going to want to take something home with them that they can listen to again, or a T-shirt they can wear so they have a story to share with their friends (free advertising!). Offer nothing as a follow-up to your show and it doesn’t matter if you just played the most epic set of the tour: you immediately halve your exposure potential.

Patches and buttons can be made very cheaply. Just sayin’.

sportin'.
sportin’.

 

 

Don’t introduce yourself. You know that band that are just way too cool to say hello to the audience, and instead plow wordlessly through their set before unplugging and stalking offstage for dramatic effect? Yeah, don’t be that band.

Be rude to the sound guy. A crucial element to the success/enjoyment of every gig is whether or not you piss off – intentionally or inadvertently – the guy/girl in control of what people are going to hear. So a few basic rules to follow:

  • Arrive to soundcheck on time. Remember that sound check is not band practice. If you think it is, you shouldn’t be on tour.
  • Follow the engineer’s instructions. He has a lot of mics and levels to organize, and doesn’t want to be there tweaking for two hours. You’re also (probably) not the only band this person needs to cater to. If he asks you to turn down your amp (guitar players, looking at you), just do it already.
  • Communicate politely and clearly. If you can’t hear something, have a request, or something isn’t working, let him or her know.

soundguy

 

Don’t say thanks. To the crowd for coming out, to the support acts or the act you’re supporting, to the sound engineer (see above), the booker, the venue…gratitude gets you a long way in this game. It endears you to the strangers who’ve chosen to spend their evening and money on you, and can get you invited to play more gigs or to come back again in future.

You're too kind, really.
You’re too kind, really.

 

Don’t promote. You know, you might get really lucky and have a booking agent or a venue that’s willing to promote the show on your behalf. Or you might score a sweet support slot for a band that you know are going to draw a crowd no hassle. But listen up: you still need to promote your show.

Why? Because that’s part of pulling your weight as a touring band. The deal is exposure – for everyone, not just for you. The least you can do is make an effort and throw up an event page on facebook. If just one person from your friend list comes along, you’ve done your job.

 

Try to adhere to a schedule/routine/backline setup. Life on the road is mayhem. Pure and simple. Vans break down, blizzards shut down roads, venues cancel shows for no reason.

Amps blow, pedals go all ghost function, leads and stands and 9 volt batteries mysteriously vanish.

Absolute arseholes steal bands’ gear. Shit. Happens. yellowvan

 

It goes without saying that you should have some level of organization to your plan, and to be responsible at least for your own gear and your person, but if by some crappy twist of luck, something un-ideal happens, the worst thing you can do is freak out; throw a fit; start a fight; get all demanding.

 

The best touring bands stay positive, remain flexible, expect the unexpected, and roll with the punches. They pitch in to help other bands when something goes wrong, knowing the road to memorable gigs is two-way, and paved with selfless acts.

 

These are the bands that people travel to other towns to see, that get asked back, that other bands reach out to when they’re thinking of hitting the road again.

 

Then again, it is entirely possible that touring just does not suit your band. And the only way to find that out is to do it. Just do everyone a favor once you do and stop.

 

Give up. You already know something unforeseen is likely to happen. So what should you do when it does? Well, if you want to totally suck at touring, take it as a sign that this gig/leg of the tour/entire thing is a sham and shouldn’t be happening at all. Sigh deeply, pull a U-ey, and drive your miserable butts back to Minnesota, or wherever it is you came from. Everyone will thank you later.

Or.

Show up anyway (better late than never), shake a few hands, explain what happened, offer to play and improvise if need be (house parties make great backups for venue cancellations, and often provide a night’s sleep), make friends and rack up another bonkers story for the tour diary.

Just NAUSIA being chill.
Just NAUSIA being chill.

 

Do it right, and in a year or so, you’ll be itching to start a new one.

Filed Under: Artist Matching, Artists, Independent Musicians, Music Advice, Music Industry, Tour Tagged With: bands, DIY, how to suck at touring, independent, live music, promotion, tour, touring, youbloom

4 Incredible Music Organizations You Should Know About

01-Oct-2015 By Shannon Duvall

The world can be a challenging place.

From disease to poverty; from war to climate threats to the fight for equality across all interpersonal lines, we humans have got a hard row to hoe. When the going gets tough, the tough usually get something amazing going, and as much as we can hurt, we can also heal. Over the millenia we’ve become very good at sussing out what works when we need it to.

One of the most powerful proven recuperative forces in the world, we know, is music. Oliver Sacks (RIP) knew it, Robert Burton knew it – hell, even Hippocrates and Plato knew it, and since we’ve had problems, we’ve had melodic ways of working through them. Schizophrenia. Heart disease. Brain injury. Autism. Depression.

"Play me some Doobie Brothers, won't you, Aristotle? I want to hear that funky dixieland."
“Play me some Doobie Brothers, won’t you, Aristotle? I want to hear that funky dixieland.”

There’s virtually nothing music can’t help with. The next time you’re feeling charitable, have a peek at the websites of some of the most beneficent music organizations out there. Send them a check. Write them a nice letter. Buy them all coffees.

We’d surely be poorer without the work that they do.

 

  1. National Youth Orchestra of Iraq

Labeled by some as The Bravest Orchestra in the World, the NYOI is a collection of mostly self-taught musicians from various religious and cultural backgrounds all over Iraq. Using music as a means to transcend boundaries – the group includes Sunnis and Shia, along with Christians and Kurds – the orchestra represents a remarkable show of compassion in one of the most challenging and dangerous culture clash regions of the world.

Image courtesy of NYOI and Wikimedia Commons.
Image courtesy of NYOI and Wikimedia Commons.

That they don’t share a common spoken language, or even have a physical space to rehearse in (they use youtube to practice and to audition to avoid terrorist attacks and fundamentalist violence) is no hindrance to their progress; they have performed for audiences in many parts of the world. A bona fide testament to the power of music and its ability to bridge otherwise unspannable chasms.

 

 

  1. Guitars 4 Vets

Founded by a Vietnam war veteran, who credits playing his acoustic guitar while stationed overseas with helping him to stay sane and connect with fellow troops, Guitars 4 Vets has potentially saved thousands of lives.

PTSD, the demon which haunts countless survivors of intense situations, and is rife among former soldiers previously stationed in combat areas, is a psychological illness which can be crippling. It can lead to job loss, relationship breakdown, alienation, hospitalization, drug and alcohol addiction, homelessness, and very often, suicide or self-harm.

Now in their fifth year, Guitars 4 Vets have given away over 2000 free guitars to troubled veterans, along with more than 20,000 free lessons, turning the destructive into the constructive through the power of music.

 

 

  1. Cateura Orchestra of Recycled Instruments

In a South American slum built on a landfill, something very interesting is happening.

Kids are learning to play classical music on pieces of trash.

That’s right – trash.

Ascuncion, Paraguay teacher Favio Chavez has spent the past six years training local children to play instruments made from various types of rubbish found on the endless mountains the ghetto is built on. He recruits residents – whose job it is to sort and recycle the trash – to bring him useful items such as oil drums and tin cans that he can modify into musical instruments. They even have saxophones made from gutters.

Yep.

Chavez says the program offers all members of the poverty-stricken community a wider perspective. Kids stay off drugs, out of gangs, child labor and sometimes worse, while parents are inspired to kick their own addictions and pursue formerly abandoned goals of training and education.

They’ve even made a movie out of it. See it here: http://www.landfillharmonicmovie.com/

 

 

4. Musicians Without Borders

“War divides. Music connects.”

This is the motto of perhaps the most powerful music program out there today. All over the world, NGO Musicians Without Borders works with local musicians and organizations to build long-term, sustainable music programs which utilize the therapeutic nature of music to help those most in need.

Image courtesy of MWB and Wikimedia Commons.
Image courtesy of MWB and Wikimedia Commons.

From divided communities in Northern Ireland to HIV/AIDS sufferers in Rwanda, MWB’s  projects and initiatives help people communicate what words can’t convey. Through music lessons and jam sessions, the group fosters hope and understanding, giving them an outlet for passion and expression, relieving them of the burden of worry for awhile.

Filed Under: Global Music Village, Music Advice, Music Industry

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • …
  • 11
  • Next Page »

Live events your way.

Step into the fan-owned future of music.

Main Pages

  • Home
  • Blog

Get Involved

  • Intern

Contact

  • Contact youbloom

Legal

  • Privacy & Cookies
  • Terms

Copyright youbloom © 2025

By continuing to browse this site, you agree to our use of cookies.