Ghost Funk Orchestra / The Jack Moves / BaLonley

Schedule

Sat Mar 26 2022 at 08:00 pm to 11:00 pm

Location

Lucky You Lounge | Spokane, WA

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All sales are final. Lucky You Lounge is 21+ with no exceptions. Show doors open at 7pm. Restaurant open at 3pm. Basement Lounge open at 6pm
About this Event

COVID-19 UPDATE:

In an effort to ensure the health & safety of our staff and patrons from the recent rise in COVID-19 cases, all patrons will need to show proof of vaccination (card or photo of card) or a negative COVID-19 test within 48 hours from the time of entry to the venue in order to attend concerts at Lucky You Lounge.

Masks will be required at all times in the building while not eating or drinking.

We thank you for your cooperation and understanding. For any further questions, please email [email protected].


Ghost Funk Orchestra

Ghost Funk Orchestra is the brainchild of composer/multi-instrumentalist Seth Applebaum. What started as a one-man recording project has now evolved into a 10-piece powerhouse live band. It’s a sonic kaleidoscope that defies genre specification, but draws heavy influence from the worlds of soul, psych rock, salsa, and beyond. Their unique blend of genres has attracted praise from the likes of Bandcamp, KUTX, Brooklyn Vegan, Earmilk, and more. Local NY blog Post-Trash described their sound as a ‘psych odyssey of traditional sounds delivered in a non-traditional fashion.’ Bandcamp’s Editorial Director J. Edward Keyes praised the band’s ability to ‘leave no funk-adjacent genre unexplored.’ Experimentation is the key, and unpredictability is what has been attracting folks from all corners of the globe to see what GFO pulls off next…





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The Jack Moves

New Jersey duo the Jack Moves emerged in 2010 playing a hip brand of throwback R&B that combined their shared of love of classic soul, hip-hop, and funk. Following several buzzed-about singles, they issued their debut album, 2015's The Jack Moves, on Wax Poetics.



Consisting of falsetto-equipped Zee Desmondes (vocalist, guitarist) and Teddy Powell (vocalist, instrumentalist, producer), the Jack Moves initially crossed paths skateboarding in Manhattan's Lower East Side. Bonding over a mutual affinity for '70s R&B artists like Bobby Caldwell, Curtis Mayfield, and the Delfonics, as well as hip-hop outfits like Wu-Tang Clan, and Snoop Dogg, they joined musical forces and eventually based themselves out of Newark, New Jersey. In 2010, Desmondes and Powell released a dusty ballad titled "Fool for You" on Full Time -- the name of their label, like their name, presumably a reference to a line from Ice Cube's "Jackin' for Beats." A few years later, the musicians connected with the record label extension of Wax Poetics magazine and released another 7" single, the elegantly finessed and aching "Doublin' Down." In October 2015, following the release of their third and fourth distinctive singles, the duo issued their debut album, the eponymous The Jack Moves. Over the next few years, they stayed busy touring and prepping more material. In 2018, they issued their sophomore full-length album, Free Money, which included the single "Money Clouds."


BaLonley

Traditionally, rock and roll is an area for rebellion. It’s a place where front people rip off their t-shirts and throw them into the shrieking crowds only hours later to retreat to hotel rooms and throw more stuff out the upper floor windows. That’s the cliché, anyway. But Spokane musician and frontman Norman Robbins zigs when considering the traditional zag. Robbins has a charming, almost effervescent quality to him and his music, and, if that wasn’t enough, when his group, BaLonely, performs, Robbins always shares the stage with his mom Kristin, who is in the group and has been from day one.



“I’ve always had a really good relationship with my parents,” Robbins says. “They’ve always been really supportive of my music. We just get along with each other together, and it’s simple as that, really. With a band, it’s important to have good relationships with everyone, and that’s how I feel about everyone in BaLonely.”


The Spokane-based band, which gets together these days about once a week to practice or record as they continue to work on new tunes, includes five members. Its roots are equally as charming as its present. Years ago, Robbins had been in a three-piece with his mom and dad and a fourth member, a drummer. While that band didn’t last, Robbins and his mom wanted to keep playing in a band together, so they found new members and BaLonely was born.


“We were playing as a three-piece for about a year or two,” Robbins says. “Then we had some close friends of mine joined, Adam and Alex Smith, the Smith Brothers. I call them Spokane’s Wrecking Crew.” The quintet is rounded out with drummer Cody Brooks.


BaLonely released its first LP in 2018, Stories. The record, while a bit Lo-Fi, is encouraging. It also includes the local titular hit and delightful music video. The video marked something, a return to an important place for the band, where everything began for the group. They shot the savvy, one-take video at Neato Burrito, owned by Patty Tully and Tim Lannigan, the folks who gave BaLonely their first gig.


“The first person to book me a show was Patty,” Robbins says. “She basically raised me alongside with her kids. I think I had a phone recording of me playing guitar, a bass drum and singing at the same time. I sent it to her, and she said, ‘I’m booking you a show.’”

Today, the 23-year-old Robbins has played many gigs, including recent ones at Spokane’s Lucky You Lounge and The Hidden Mother Brewery. He’s come a long way since that early phone recording. Growing up, Robbins found himself immersed in music. Again, thanks to his parents, who played tunes around the house. As a kid, he was obsessed with sounds. Because his parents are musicians, they also had recording equipment around their Spokane home.

“I had this obsession with flipping through all the voices on these cheap Yamaha keyboards,” Robbins says. “I’d sit there for hours, flipping through and making loops. I was diving into the sounds of all of these instruments.”

While BaLonely’s first record was a bit more rudimentary, the band’s second album, Staples, is more developed. It shows the trajectory of musicians bent on improvement. These days, the group is working on more music to release soon. The five-piece has been putting together a new LP. At first, it was going to be done in a few weeks, but the members have been taking their time refining it because of the pandemic. The slated release date is March 2022.

“It’s been in the works for two years now,” Robbins says with a chuckle. “It’s been a long time. But it’s also been a nice change from the records that we’ve worked on in the past where we maybe had, like, this many days to record. Our mentality now has just been to take as much time as we need until it feels right — without losing our minds over it.”

BaLonely will release a few singles leading up to the record’s spring unveiling. Robbins calls it the biggest project the group has ever worked on. And while that may worry some fans of other bands, for a group bonded over familial feelings —both proverbial and actual — BaLonely shouldn’t have any problems pushing through and achieving goals.

“I’m just obsessed with sound,” Robbins says. “Whatever makes sound, I love it. It just moves people in a way that you can’t really explain.”

Spokane Talk, by Jacob Uitti


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Where is it happening?

Lucky You Lounge, 1801 W Sunset Blvd, Spokane, United States

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Tickets

USD 12.00

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