ReportWire

Tag: local music

  • Metro Detroit Bands Come Together to Help Local Family

    When it comes to helping others in the community, local Detroit Bands always come to the rescue.

    Scott Randall

    Kiersten Mullins and Family

    The Story Behind The Benefit

    Jimmy Mullins lost the love of his life and the Mother to his 8 Children at the age of 34 with no answers other than she was called home….

    Not only a devoted Wife and Mother but served the Community and was Educated as a EMT.

    Her youngest is almost 7 months and oldest is under 16.

    This is a Mix Between Detroit Bands from the Westside, Downriver, and Eastside Bands….

    Local benefit scott randall

    Freddy’s Bar and Grill Local Benefit

    All because Music Matters and Music Makes Sure You Matter!!!

    This is Danny Grimm Son’s Family and his Music Family have showed up to Donate Time and Talent…as well as attend!!!

    Contact Laura Cahill if you have raffle baskets or items to donate because we need as many as we can get…

    Kim Van Loo is collecting any and all band swag for a rock box to win

    A Treasure chest of local band merchandiseScott Randall

    A Trunk of Local Band Merch we call “The Rock Box” Every band donated t shirts and swag and the entire truck got raffled to one lucky person

    Rock 4 totsScott Randall

    Local Bands Come Together To Help

    Local band Mob Operascott randall

    Local Band Mob Opera Helping out with a Benefit

    Just amazing is the talent in this music community all donating time to help.

    The Line up of bands is incredible for this Sunday January 25th at Freddys Bar & Grill

    Bands for the eastside and westside are ready help with a show that will be amazing.

    Interstate 90's - Detroitscott randall

    Interstate 90’s – Detroit

    Band Times

    9 pm: Chit with WCSX’s Screamin Scott

    Freddy’s Bar and Grill is located on 40000 Garfield Road, Clinton Twp

    Screamin Scott

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  • Phoenix rockers Blanche Davidian are back, after more than a decade

    Phoenix rockers Blanche Davidian are back in action after a 13-year hiatus, and they’re gassed up and ready to rock. On Friday at Chopper John’s, the five-piece band will share the lineup with old-school Boston hardcore band The Freeze, Scorpion vs. Tarantula, and Sick in the Head…

    Amy Young

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  • Kate Siamro Says It’s a ‘Special Experience’ to DJ With Friends Who Elevate the Artform

    Kate Siamro doesn’t have an alter-ego stage name, and it makes her spinning seem even more genuine. Everything she’s done seems to follow a path that represents her true self…

    Jason Janik

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  • LOOK: What we saw at the inaugural Indieverse music festival

    On Saturday, Indie 102.3 celebrated the first-ever Indieverse with a stacked lineup at Levitt Pavilion.

    The night included performances by local bands Pink Fuzz and Dead Pioneers, plus national acts Bartees Strange, DEHD and OK Go.

    Dehd on stage at Indieverse, Sept. 13, 2025, at Levitt Pavilion in Denver.
    The Indie 102.3 team at Indieverse, Sept. 13, 2025, at Levitt Pavilion in Denver. From left: Alisha Sweeney, Dana Meyers, Shawn Lucero, Willobee CArlan, Jason Thomas.
    Dead Pioneers’ Greg Deal
    Dead Pioneers’ Greg Deal at Indieverse, Sept. 13, 2025, at Levitt Pavilion in Denver.
    Dead Pioneers’ Greg Deal, Abe Brennan and Josh Rivera, from left, at Indieverse
    Dead Pioneers’ Greg Deal, Abe Brennan and Josh Rivera, from left, at Indieverse, Sept. 13, 2025, at Levitt Pavilion in Denver
    Dana Meyers welcomes the crowd during Indieverse, Sept. 13, 2025, at Levitt Pavilion in Denver.
    Bartees Strange at Indieverse
    Bartees Strange at Indieverse, Sept. 13, 2025, at Levitt Pavilion in Denver.
    Indie 102.3’s Alisha Sweeney signs an Indieverse poster for an Indie Insider during a VIP backstage event, Sept. 13, 2025, at Levitt Pavilion in Denver.
    Dehd’s Emily Kempf at Indieverse
    Dehd’s Emily Kempf at Indieverse, Sept. 13, 2025, at Levitt Pavilion in Denver.
    A rainbow over Indieverse at Levitt Pavilion
    Stormy skies threatened Indieverse at Levitt Pavillion Sept. 13, 2025, for a little while. Then the crowd was treated to a rainbow.
    Members of the Colorado Public Radio team at Indieverse, Sept. 13, 2025, at Levitt Pavilion. From left: Willobee Carlan, Jessi Whitten, Shawn Lucero, Cayla Montoya-Manzo, Jason Thomas, Alisha Sweeney, Dana Meyers.
    Some of the light show at Indieverse
    Some of the light show at Indieverse at Levitt Pavilion, Sept. 13, 2025.
    OK Go at Indieverse
    OK Go at Indieverse, Sept. 13, 2025, at Levitt Pavilion in Denver.
    Confetti rains down on OK Go fans at Indieverse
    Confetti rains down on OK Go fans at Indieverse, Sept. 13, 2025, at Levitt Pavilion in Denver.

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  • Hustleman Quise Gathers New Dallas Talent for First Mixtape Since Record Deal

    In 2025, the New Dallas movement is the regional scene to pay attention to in hip-hop. After following the rise of Zillionaire Doe, Montana 700 and HeadHuncho Amir, it is Hustleman Quise’s turn to put his stamp on the New Dallas sound…

    Eric Diep

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  • Is Denver a city where musicians can make it big? Here’s what artists had to say

    Is Denver a city where musicians can make it big? Here’s what artists had to say

    Denver has a vibrant local music scene. Many musicians working in the city describe it as a supportive and welcoming community, without the competition they’ve seen in other cities.

    The city is also home to CU Denver’s Music and Entertainment Studies program, which won Billboard Magazine’s “Top Music Business School” award in 2021, 2022, and 2023.

    Storm Gloor, an associate professor in CU’s program, has taught many of the city’s local artists and industry professionals. One thing that sets Colorado apart from other markets is the music fans.

    “Statistically our fans, Colorado fans — I’ve seen the reports and the research — attend concerts more than other cities,” he said.

    Although Colorado has a greater likelihood that fans will come out to support live shows, the state presents challenges for musicians trying to build long-lasting careers.

    Colorado is a long drive from the nearest big cities, and even more removed from the coasts. This makes touring difficult, with long and expensive hauls between home and places where gigs can be strung together in close proximity. 

    There’s also the issue of networking in a smaller market. Though launching a career in a less competitive city can be easier, establishing a base in a bigger city with more powerful players presents more opportunities for growth. 

    This leads a lot of artists to wonder whether they should pursue their careers elsewhere or stick it out in the state’s vibrant-yet-secluded scene. 

    Here’s what four artists with local ties had to say.


    Chris Bowers Castillo of Kiltro

    The Underground Music Showcase. July 27, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Chris Bowers Castillo was born in Aurora and grew up splitting his time between Colorado and Santiago, Chile. Shortly after graduating from CU Boulder, he moved to Valparaíso, a coastal Chilean town, where he started developing Kiltro’s sound.

    He said he performed in Valparaíso a few times but didn’t “do it in an active, dedicated way” until he moved back to the States. But when he landed back in Denver and began to focus on the project, he saw fans take an interest in his work.

    “People can smell authenticity the way they can sense fear,” he said. “If you have something that’s sincere and your own — and it can’t be found easily elsewhere — they’ll come to you for it.”

    To overcome the competitive nature of the field, he said artists have to find their voice and create a product that is impressive in some way — whether that’s technical ability, the personality of the live performance, or something else.

    That strategy proved successful for Bowers Castillo: Kiltro is known for its distinct, ambient-yet-soulful Latin sound.

    But the music can’t speak for itself, artists have to get their work in front of the right people.

    “In Denver, you probably have to put yourself into many, many rooms before it really helps you out,” he said. “It’s an industry of luck, but you have to put yourself in the way of getting lucky.”

    Since Denver isn’t a top city for the music industry, the “right room” is harder to find.

    On the other hand: “It’s a smaller scene and that can be its own catapult.”

    That was the case for Kiltro, which Bowers Castillo said gained its initial momentum via local radio plays. From there, he said, “Our following just started growing. It felt pretty organic, and that was really cool.”

    Since the band’s 2019 debut album, “Creatures of Habit,” Kiltro has been signed to national label 7S, toured the country, been featured on KEXP and NPR, and will soon be touring with Y La Bamba.


    Carla Huiracocha, aka Neoma

    Neoma plays the Underground Music Showcase’s Underground Stage. July 27, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Carla Huiracocha, who performs under the name Neoma, began her music career in her hometown of Cuenca, Ecuador, an Andean city slightly smaller than Denver. In 2017, she hit the top of the Ecuadorian charts with her dreamy-yet-energetic synth pop single “Real.”

    But she knew a career in Ecuador could only reach a certain level. 

    “There’s a lot of great artists and music in South America,” she said. But “there’s no resources, no one even cares about art because there’s so many other things happening down there.”

    So she decided to move, and her choices came down to Colorado or New York. She had family in both states, but thought the pace of life would be a better fit in Colorado. So she came out to visit her now partner and producer Danny Pauta, who already lived in Denver, and stayed.

    Since relocating, Huiracocha has found musical success, but still needs to work a day job.

    “I would love to pay my bills with music,” she said. “Sometimes I’m able to do that. If we play a lot of shows, I’m able to cover the rent, but that’s pretty much it.” 

    “Right now, it feels like I have two jobs,” she continued. “I have my day job, and then at night I’m writing, I’m producing, I’m working with other musicians. I take lessons. I try to learn all the time and get better.”

    She hopes that as Neoma grows, she can spend more time focused on her music. 

    Her advice for other musicians trying to make it in the Denver scene is to build authentic connections. “Go out, meet people and be like, ‘Hi, this is my project, come to my show.’ Don’t be shy about it.”

    That’s how she’s built relationships with fans and other artists, including Bowers Castillo. This past spring, she joined Kiltro on the band’s West Coast tour.

    “They were one of my favorite bands when I first came to Denver,” she said. “So it was crazy for me that they asked me to go on tour with them, and that was very beautiful.”


    Forrest Raup, freelance drummer

    Forrest Raup playing drums at the Grace DeVine EP release show at Globe Hall on Sept. 15, 2023.
    Forrest Raup playing drums at the Grace DeVine EP release show at Globe Hall on Sept. 15, 2023.
    Julianna Williams (@juliannaphotography)

    Forrest Raup, a freelance drummer who has played with an array of local and national acts, grew up in Boulder. He studied performance and arranging at the Berklee College of Music in Boston for a year, then returned to Colorado to study audio engineering at the University of Colorado Denver.

    When the COVID-19 pandemic shut things down in 2020, Rupp was in the early stages of his program at CU Denver. No longer able to use the equipment at school, he invested in a few pieces of basic gear and began recording at home.

    “I just started putting clips up on social media. I would sync the audio I recorded with little videos I took of myself playing, just to get the word out there to be like, ‘Yo, I have a home recording set-up,’” he said. “And it was such a perfect time for that because no one could play music together, so the only way you could collaborate was remotely.”

    Shortly after he started posting his videos, he said people began reaching out to him with work.

    Raup said that his approach to building his music career here has been to “say yes to everything at first. Even if the pay isn’t great, or even if it doesn’t pay anything but it might lead to a cool experience or meeting a group of cool people, then say yes to it.”

    That’s how he’s built his career. He’s said yes to collaborating with all sorts of acts, including Pink Fuzz, Eldren and The AJ Fullerton Band, among many others. He has since toured with Twen and Celtic Thunder.

    When it comes to growing his career, he said he has considered moving to a bigger market.

    “It’s a very real possibility that by moving to a place like LA or New York, you will be a small fish in a big pond and it might stay that way,” he said. “But at the same time, it’s like a leap of faith. And to eventually grow into a bigger fish in a bigger pond would be ultimately very rewarding. But I think the work that it takes and the risks involved are very, very daunting — and just not doable for a lot of people too, because it’s so expensive to live in those places.”


    Olivia Rudeen, singer-songwriter

    Olivia Rudeen plays a set at Baere Brewing during the Underground Music Showcase. July 27, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Olivia Rudeen is a singer-songwriter from Denver who moved to Nashville in 2013 after graduating from CU Denver’s music program. She met a music publisher at the Durango Songwriters Expo and turned that meeting into a publishing deal before graduation. 

    “I had this pretty clear opportunity to move out there,” she said.

    She doesn’t think artists need to move elsewhere to make it big, but she does think it’s crucial to network in the country’s more saturated music scenes. 

    “I think it’s really important to have some sort of presence, whether you can make those connections long distance with people, or go to something like the Durango Songwriters Expo,” she said. “When I was in college, I was living at home, so I was saving money and I was using that money to make trips as often as I could. (I would) go for a week to LA or Nashville and just try to play open mics and meet people.”

    No matter where you live, she said it’s important to make music that feels authentic.

    “What’s cool will change. You can try to chase something because it seems like it would be successful in the mainstream,” she said. “And then what’s successful shifts and you have to stick to your guns.”

    She continued, “there are these moments that make it so worth it. These kind of transcendent moments when everything works – and there’s nothing else like that feeling.”

    Lauren Antonoff Hart

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  • Quebecers are listening to less local music, musicians hope federal streaming bill will help  | Globalnews.ca

    Quebecers are listening to less local music, musicians hope federal streaming bill will help | Globalnews.ca

    Quebecers are increasingly streaming music online but listening less often to francophone artists, a trend members of the province’s music industry hope will be reversed with a new federal bill.

    Around 30 per cent of physical albums sold in Quebec in 2022 were by Quebec artists, the province’s statistics institute said in mid-December 2022. But on streaming platforms such as Spotify, YouTube and Google Play Music, local artists accounted for less than eight per cent of plays.

    Statistics like that worry David Bussières, a musician who sits on the board of Union des artistes, a labour organization that represents musicians and other performers.

    A lot of the music people listen to online is recommended to them by algorithms, he said in an interview, adding that the algorithms serve global audiences and tend to recommend popular artists who perform in English rather in French.

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    Quebec’s cultural identity will be weakened if Quebecers are less aware than in years past of the province’s musicians, he said.

    “The result of this is that the Quebec audience doesn’t get enough exposure to its music; they don’t know it well enough,” said Bussières, who is one-half of the electropop duo Alfa Rococo.

    Read more:

    Google ‘trying to intimidate Canadians’ over online streaming bill, heritage minister says

    Bill C-11, currently before the Senate, would help increase Quebecers’ exposure to local francophone artists by requiring streaming platforms to promote local musicians, including francophone artists, he said.

    Under the bill, foreign online streaming services would be forced to “reflect and support Canada’s linguistic duality by placing significant importance on the creation, production and broadcasting of original French language programs.”

    Artists make money every time their songs are streamed online — though not much: one million plays on Spotify will generate $5,000 in revenue, Bussières said. But artists are also using streaming platforms to build audiences that will buy concert tickets, leading to bookings at large festivals.

    If new artists aren’t able to build audiences, they’ll struggle to make a living as musicians, Bussières said.

    “Eventually, it’s going to diminish the impact that music from here has on the public and our cultural identity is going to be weakened.”

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    In November, Quebec’s statistics agency said that only four of the top 50 most-listened-to artists in Quebec on streaming services were from the province. The number 1 Quebec artist was folk-rock group Les Cowboys fringants, in 16th place.

    Eve Paré, the executive director of a Quebec music industry association, said Quebecers want to listen to local music, they’re just having a harder time finding it. Record stores used to display local music prominently, Paré, with Association québécoise de l’industrie du disque, du spectacle et de la vidéo, said in an interview.


    Click to play video: 'How Bill C-11 could change streaming services in Canada'


    How Bill C-11 could change streaming services in Canada


    When CDs were still the dominant way Quebecers consumed music, local artists accounted for around half of sales, she said.

    Music consumers can’t search for what they don’t know about, so they rely on algorithms and curated playlists, she said. And streaming platforms, she added, don’t give Quebec artists enough prominence.

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    Paré, who also supports Bill C-11, said music plays an important role in Quebec culture.

    “It’s a social connection, we all have memories associated with certain songs. I think of the songs from my teenage years, for example; the people of my generation share memories associated with those same songs. It’s part of a collective heritage.”

    But critics of the bill, which would bring streaming services under the purview of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, say it won’t necessarily help Quebec artists.

    Nathan Wiszniak, head of artist and label partnerships at Spotify, told a Senate committee in September that his company’s platform allows users to discover artists that they would never hear on the radio.

    “For example, seven out of the top 10 most streamed French-Canadian artists are independent rappers, and only two of those artists currently appear on French-Canadian radio charts,” he told the committee. Users, he said, need to retain “control of their listening experience.”

    READ MORE: YouTube, TikTok say Liberals’ online streaming bill would harm digital creators

    The bill, which has been passed by the House of Commons, has also faced criticism from content creators who worry they won’t meet Canadian content requirements, and from civil libertarians who reject increased government regulation of the internet.

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    Sara Bannerman, a communications professor at McMaster University, said it’s unclear how government regulators will use the new powers granted under the bill.

    While members of Quebec’s music industry hope the law will force platforms to change their algorithms, she said that might not be the approach the CRTC takes. The regulator might rely on promotional campaigns to support Canadian content or could force streaming companies to make it easier to search for specific types of content.

    Bannerman said the algorithms of streaming services should be made accessible to independent researchers and the CRTC. Recommendation algorithms aren’t neutral, she said, adding that they tend to be biased toward popular content and may also have racial and gender biases.

    Bussières said increasing the prominence of Quebec artists on streaming sites is critical to a healthy Quebec music industry — and a strong culture.

    “When we celebrate the Fête nationale, when we celebrate something, when we celebrate our culture, much more often than not, it’s through music.”

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