POP PUNK | Mayday Parade
Tues. April 22
$20/adv., $23/door
Music Farm

The guys in Tallahassee, Fla.-based Mayday Parade first came together in the early 2000s. At the time, they were just a group of dudes practicing in a warehouse, but since then the crew has blossomed into a killer pop-punk crew of BFFs. โ€œWe understand each other more now and can practically predict what each of us are trying to do musically,โ€ says drummer Jake Bundrick. โ€œItโ€™s nice to have come this far and still remain good friends. Believe it or not, thatโ€™s hard to do.โ€ Lyrically, the band has evolved from their 2006 EP Tales Told By Dead Friends to their most recent 2013 record Monsters in the Closet, as the boys in Mayday Parade matured โ€” one member even has a young child. In fact, one of the driving themes behind their new music is the idea that we are all in this together, and, well, thatโ€™s a comforting thought. โ€œI just want people to realize theyโ€™re not alone in life. Both bad and good things happen to everyone,โ€ Bundrick says. โ€”Kalyn Oyer TUESDAY

PSYCHE BLUES | Peopleโ€™s Blues of Richmond
w/ The Marcus King Band
Thurs. April 17
9 p.m.
$5
Royal American

The Peopleโ€™s Blues of Richmond shake, rattle, and roll like a rusty pick-up cruising down a country road, with clouds of dust in the rear view, the windows down, and the stereo blasting some James Gang. The Richmond trioโ€™s psych-blues boogie blends thundering muscularity with the pliable bottom-end of a saucy bar wenchโ€™s curvy caboose. Guitarist Tim Beavers and bassist Matt Volkes connected in college, grieving the loss of a mutual friend. That woozy, drug-addled woe fueled the sound of their 2010 debut, Hard-On Blues. Afterwards the core duo added a full-time drummer and organ player. That new lineup drove last summerโ€™s follow-up Good Time Suicide, a fitting description of the bandโ€™s dark, increasingly carnival-esque sound. However, the new players didnโ€™t fit PBRโ€™s hard-touring ethos and departed shortly after the albumโ€™s release. Beavers and Volkes pared back to a trio, adding drummer Nekoro Williams, son of the Wailersโ€™ percussionist Drummie Zeb. Williamsโ€™ outstanding feel compensates for the loss of keyboards, giving the band a keen rhythmic ebb and flow. He augments the builds when the tunes get jammy, adds subtle syncopation during the churning hard-blues moments, and provides intoxicating dub bounce during the bandโ€™s slower, bluesy ballads, as evident on their new live concert release, The Oil Change Tapes. โ€”Chris Parker THURSDAY

BREEZE-HOP | Aer
w/ Ground Up, DJ Smiles
Sat. April 19
$15/adv., $18/door
Music Farm

Feel-good hip-hop duo Aer, a.k.a. David von Mering and Carter Schultz, blend rap, reggae, pop, and indie rock. Not surprisingly, the bandโ€™s lyrics center on gettinโ€™ high, makinโ€™ music, and just having a good time. Before Aer released their albums, 2011โ€™s What You Need and 2012โ€™s The Bright Side, they were dropping full-length mixed tapes. โ€œWe started out as a rock band when we were 16 and juniors in high school,โ€ says Mering. โ€œAfter that, Carter was in Costa Rica for six months, and I would send him beats I had made that he would sing over.โ€ These days, Mering and Schultz have been touring with big names like Macklemore + Ryan Lewis. โ€œIt was one of the cooler moments of our career,โ€ says Schultz. And there are more collabs in the future. โ€œWeโ€™re going to make a lot of music videos and do a huge tour with some big names this summer, but we arenโ€™t allowed to talk about it yet,โ€ says Mering. โ€”Kalyn Oyer SATURDAY

Haunted Folk | Shivering Timbers
w/ Andrew Scotchie and the River Rats, Kelly McFarling, Chris Rodrigues, Austin Miller
6 p.m.
Wed. April 16
$5 donation
Awendaw Green

w/ Elonzo
10 p.m.
Thurs. April 17
$5
Tin Roof

You know your bandโ€™s off to a good start when you can get The Black Keysโ€™ Dan Auerbach to produce your debut. And thatโ€™s just what happened for Akron, Ohio-based indie-folk-rockers Shivering Timbers with their 2010 record We All Started in the Same Place. The Shivering Timbers story began when the husband-and-wife duo of Jayson and Sarah Benn began writing songs for their then-infant daughter, Suzi. Those tunes led the pair to hit the stage; eventually they added drummer Daniel Kshywonis to the mix. Marked by a style thatโ€™s folkie, nimble, and haunted with lingering lullabies, the Shivering Timbers have the ability to morph into something a bit more rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll, too. Evidence of that can be heard on โ€œGenerations,โ€ a track off their latest album Sing Sing. The tune allows Sarahโ€™s voice to resonate beautifully as Jayson gets crunchy with a set of heavily distorted guitar riffs, a la Auerbach. While itโ€™s hard to nail down a particular influence, Sarah reveals that touring with local darlings Shovels and Rope a couple of years back had a big impact on their music. Audiences can expect six-year-old Suzi to make an appearance on both chord organ and tambourine. โ€”John A. Zara Wednesday and THURSDAY


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