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Archive for the ‘Haddon Heights, NJ’ Category

[ATTENDED: September 3, 2025] Karina Rykman 

We didn’t really plan to go to  this show, especially since it was right at the beginning of the school year.  But, since these shows have a strict 9:30 curfew, we decided to drive the hour and get a free show with Karina Rykman!  Because who doesn’t love a night of Karina!

The amazing thing is that Karina has recently posted videos of her in front of these giant festival crowds, and here we were surrounded by a few hundred people and able to get right up next to the stage.

Karina came out and the joy and good vibes started right away.  It’s unclear whether the crowd knew her or not (although there were a lot of hippie types with jam band shirts on).  The trio absolutely fills the space with guitar wizard Adam November filling the space with his effects and soloing skills and drummer Chris Corsico keeping things together but adding some fun too.

The opening instrumental jamming of the new song Lagos > Dirty South was just fantastic.  A jamming/funky/super fun opening which got a whole lot of people off their feet and standing in front of the stage.  This blocked our view and so we took this as a chance to get up and dance (well, sway, really).  Which also meant getting right up on stage to see even better.

I always wonder what people think when they shift from the rocking instrumentals to her far more poppy and gentle song-songs.  Her voice is so soft an airy (very different from her speaking voice).  But these songs are a delightful breather before the grooviness of Plants comes on (with Adam November showcasing all of the cool sounds he can get from his gear).

Up next was another new song, Change My Flight (I guess a new album is on the way?) followed by the Ween cover Springtheme.  When she was singing the lyrics I was think they didn’t sound like her lyrics and now I see that it’s a Ween cover.  It segued perfectly into City Kids.  The crowd loved City Kids and mid-song she brought up Jeremy Kaplan of Dogs in a Pile to play a lengthy melodica solo [no wonder she didn’t have time to play everything on the setlist]. (more…)

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[ATTENDED: September 3, 2025] David Bakey

We didn’t really plan to go to  this show, especially since it was right at the beginning of the school year.  But, since these shows have a strict 9:30 curfew, we decided to drive the hour and get a free show with Karina Rykman!

It was announced that David Bakey would be opening.  Bakey is a NJ based guitarist (his father apparently works for Camden County).  I had never heard of him (and I would guess that he and Karina might not have even met as neither one acknowledged the other from the stage).

Bakey is more than a guitarist.  He plays a phenomenal style in which he uses both hands on the fretboard, but also created percussive sounds and chords with his right hand while his left is playing fairly complicated melodies.

He played six songs, all of which were pretty long and with multiple components.

For the first two songs he sat and played acoustic guitar.  For the next one he stood and played the electric guitar.  Then came the show stopper–he played his electric with his left hand and with his right, he played a guitar that was on a table.  So he was basically tapping both guitars at the same time. It was amazing to watch.

He ended the set with two more acoustic guitar songs, one of which was on the 12 string and sounded glorious.

I don’t know what the songs were called (he didn’t say much).  Heh, as I look at his album online, it seems that most of his songs are fairly short, so maybe he played many short pieces instead of a few longer ones.

It was a gorgeous night in the park and his music was suitably delightful.

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[ATTENDED: August 14, 2024] Steven Page & Tom Hampton

The summer concert series is a delight.  I really enjoyed going to see Kathleen Edwards there a few years ago.  It’s free and it’s a beautiful venue–especially if it’s a nice night.

I love seeing Steven Page and would have really enjoyed going to this show.  But my brother in law was in town and he was heading to the airport that day, so it really messed with our schedule.

I have not heard of Tom Hampton and what I discovered is

Multi-instrumentalist and singer/songwriter Tom Hampton enjoyed a long career as a sideman to a bevy of notable artists before landing an extended road stint with Marshall Tucker Band and ultimately landing with Poco, where he stayed until the passing of founder Rusty Young in 2021. Refocused on writing and releasing his own material, there’ll be lots of new music coming in 2024.

Odd choice, I suppose.  I wonder how many people have heard of him.

 

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[DID NOT ATTEND: June 5, 2024] Say She She / Carly Moffa

My wife has been really enjoying Say She She as of late.  I was a little surprised that they hadn’t done a show in Philly in a little while and then it was announced that they were playing the Summer Concert Series in Camden County. I had been to this location once two years ago and really liked it.

I thought we would both enjoy going to this delightful outdoor setting to enjoy some gorgeous harmonies.  We even both took off work the day after (for unrelated reasons).  But then it decided to rain.  A lot.  We weren’t sure of the show was going on (there are no tickets, so no way to let anyone know what was going on).  We decided not to risk it, so we stayed home.

I found out later that the show had been moved to the Scottish Rite Auditorium in Collingswood. I don’t know anything about that venue and probably wouldn’t have wanted to go there, so I don’t feel bad that we stayed home. (more…)

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[DID NOT ATTEND: September 14, 2022] Richard Thompson / Jonah Tolchin [rescheuled from September 7, 2022]

This show had been postponed by a week.  But it turned out to be the same night as Pearl Jam.  So, sorry Richard, I didn’t show up for your free show.

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I have seen Richard Thompson more than almost any other musician.  This is largely because for several years in a row he played McCarter Theater in Princeton which felt like a short enough distance for us to go when the kids were littler.

Now that I have seen him so often, I’m trying to making him my most-seen performer (although he won’t ever beat Phish since Phish does many multi-date shows near me).

I was pretty excited to see him for this show, especially since it was free!  I had been to this location for Kathleen Edwards a few weeks earlier (what a great summer line up!).  But as the day moved on, the rain proved to be torrential.  Since Richard lives nearby, he was able to postpone his show for a week.  To a night that I wasn’t free.  Alas.

I had not heard of Jonah Tolchin.  He’s a New Jersey native–his bandcamp says he’s from Princeton.

I listened to a few of his songs on bandcamp, and I rather like them.  He’s got an interesting mix of folk with a kind of punky attitude.  His earlier stuff (when he wa sa long haired hippy) is more folkie, but his latest album (2022’s Lava Lamp) is a bit more stripped down and raw, giving it a rougher edge, maybe like Nathaniel Rateliff.

This would have been a fun double bill (even if Richard would probably only have played his biggest hits).

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[POSTPONED: September 7, 2022] Richard Thompson / Jonah Tolchin

I have seen Richard Thompson more than almost any other musician.  This is largely because for several years in a row he played McCarter Theater in Princeton which felt like a short enough distance for us to go when the kids were littler.

Now that I have seen him so often, I’m trying to making him my most-seen performer (although he won’t ever beat Phish since Phish does many multi-date shows near me).

I was pretty excited to see him for this show, especially since it was free!  I had been to this location for Kathleen Edwards a few weeks earlier (what a great summer line up!).  But as the day moved on, the rain proved to be torrential.  Since Richard lives nearby, he was able to postpone his show for a week.  To a night that I wasn’t free.  Alas.

I had not heard of Jonah Tolchin.  He’s a New Jersey native–his bandcamp says he’s from Princeton.

I listened to a few of his songs on bandcamp, and I rather like them.  He’s got an interesting mix of folk with a kind of punky attitude.  His earlier stuff (when he wa sa long haired hippy) is more folkie, but his latest album (2022’s Lava Lamp) is a bit more stripped down and raw, giving it a rougher edge, maybe like Nathaniel Rateliff.

This would have been a fun double bill (even if Richard would probably only have played his biggest hits).

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[ATTENDED: August 24, 2022] Kathleen Edwards

Back in 2019 Kathleen Edwards came out of “retirement” after spending five years running a coffee house in Stittsville, Ottawa called Quitters.  She has since sold Quitters and it is now something else.

She announced a few shows in 2019 and then a small tour in 2021.  I hoofed it into New York City to see what I imagined would be my only time seeing her.  (She was also opening for Jason Isbell, but I didn’t want to see her as an opener nor did I want to see Jason Isbell).

But then she announced a full tour in 2022!  I bought a ticket for her at SOPAC (I had hoofed it all the way to NYC and then she decided to play a place 40 min from my house!).  But she also announced a free show (FREE!) in Haddon Heights, NJ.  A place I’d never been and which I feared was too far away.

It’s a bit of a drive but not really worse than going to Philly and you avoid most of the Philly traffic. Plus, the venue turned out to be lovely.  A lot of people have played this summer concert series so I’ll be keeping an eye out for what’s going on next summer.

I probably could have sat on the lawn, but I decided to take the amphitheater seating that was provided  I relaxed in the full, but not packed crowd.  (I was concerned that no one would be there, but it was nicely crowded).

Kathleen came out on stage with a different set up than last time.  Last time it was guitar bass and drums, with the guitarist being Colin Cripps her ex-husband.  For this show she had a bassist Ryan Gavel and drummer Peter von Althen (same drummer different bassist) but she also had pedal steel guitar player Aaron Goldstein and Kinley Dowling who played keys and violin.  She said she was so thankful to finally have a woman on tour with her and that it brought a whole new energy to the show and the tour bus.

She told a funny story about how Aaron and Ryan were at the Toronto airport for six hours the day before but had missed their flight and had to fly into town early this morning–Aaron Goldstein a man with endless patience for your border services.  She also said that she forgot to introduce Aaron the other night and his whole family was in the audience.

I didn’t expect a hugely different set.  In fact, I didn’t know what to expect for a free show.  With people who were quite possibly there because they lived nearby and it was free.

She started with more or less the same few songs that she did in 2021, in a slightly re-arranged order. But they sounded different with this line up.  The electric guitar was gone and instead there were violin solos and a lot of pedal steel.  The pedal steel on “Options Open” changed the feel of the song but added some real depth.  As did Dowling’s backing vocals.

She seemed to think that there were not many fans there for he, but the crowd knew her stuff quite well, with a nice response for “Change the Sheets” (one of my faves) and “Hockey Skates.”  The new song “Glenfern” had a soaring violin riff which was a fun change.

Last time she told stories about some of the songs.  This time the stories were different, which was fun.  And nice to know she’s not on a script at all the shows.  She explained the origin of “One More Song the Radio won’t Like” as being a song she had to write to make her record a little longer.  She played it because someone said it was his birthday and he requested it.  She had come out to play a brief acoustic solo set (although Goldstein stayed for some lap steel accompaniment).  She also played “Empty Threat” in this style.

The band came back out and she played three different songs in the middle of the set which was fun.  She told us “Mercury” really won over people at rock festivals because it opens: “Want to go get high?/ Mercury is parked outside.”  I also enjoyed hearing “A Soft Place to Land” from Voyageur.

She then introduced Hard on Everyone with a lengthy story explaining that she had been living with someone who seemed to be angry and hard all the time–he was hard on things and things were always breaking.  She listened to a podcast called “Dirty John” and said “oh my fucking god, this is about me.”  She hoped that anyone in a similar situation could get out of it.  It really put a spin on this song that is dark but insanely catchy.  The song built and totally rocked by the end with a wicked solo from Goldstein.

She also later jokingly apologized for cursing so much at a family event.

She ended the set with “6’O’Clock News,” another fantastic song from her debut (this is the 20th anniversary of that album, Failer).

She left and the emcee for the night came out to say hat it was early enough that he was sure Kathleen would give us one more song.

She did, she came back out and played “Asking for Flowers,” a song I’ve always loved.

I really hoped she’d play “I Make the Dough, You Get the Glory,” and indeed someone did shout it out as a request, but she didn’t hear him.

This set was wonderful and it got me even more psyched to see her in a few weeks with S.

2022 SOPAC 2022 Summer Concert, NJ 2021 LPR, NYC
Simple Math ¥ Simple Math ¥ Options Open ¥
Options Open ¥ Options Open ¥ In State ⇐
In State Change the Sheets Simple Math ¥
Hockey Skates Hockey Skates Change the Sheets √
Birds on a Feeder ¥ Who Rescued Who ¥ Six O’Clock News ⊕
Glenfern ¥ Glenfern ¥ Birds on a Feeder ¥
Who Rescued Who ¥ One More Song the Radio Won’t Like ⊕ (solo w/ lap steel) Goodnight, California ∇
Evangeline (Emmylous Harris cover) Empty Threat √ (solo with lap steel) Empty Threat (solo acoustic) √
Mercury Mercury ⊕ Who Rescued Who (solo with mandolin) ¥
Hard on Everyone ¥ Fools Ride ¥ Glenfern ¥
Six O’Clock News ⊕ A Soft Place to Land √ Copied Keys ⇐
Asking for Flowers Hard on Everyone ¥ The Logical Song (Supertramp cover)
encore Six O’Clock News ⊕ Hockey Skates ⊕
Goodnight, California encore Hard on Everyone ¥
Moneytalks (AC/DC cover) (partial) Asking for Flowers encore
Comes a Time (Neil Young cover) Asking for Flowers ∇
Back to Me ⇐

⊕= Failer (2002)
⇐ = Back to Me (2005)
∇ = Asking for Flowers (2008)
√ = Voyageur (2012)
¥ = Total Freedom (2020)

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[ATTENDED: August 24, 2022] Shannen Moser

It’s funny how some artists wind up as opening acts quite often.  Shannen Moser has been listed as an opening act for several band that I was interested in seeing.  She’s also been on two Champagne Jams from The Front Bottoms.  This is only my second time seeing her though and I’m not sure when she was announced as the opener for Kathleen Edwards, because I didn’t find out until a couple of days beforehand.

Shannen is from Berks County, PA.  She plays a simple kind of open-tuned guitar (such that a capo is all you need to make a chord sound good).  Some of her songs have a finger-picking section as well.

Her lyrics are personal and often pointed.

She received a nice round of applause for saying that she played with Bernie Sanders a few days earlier at his Rally with Bernie Sanders in Philadelphia to fight back against corporate greed. (more…)

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