Single Red Cent
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Single Red Cent

New York City, New York, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2011 | SELF

New York City, New York, United States | SELF
Established on Jan, 2011
Band Rock Punk

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Press


"Village Voice"

"What NYC's Single Red Cent bring to bear is a raucously unkempt garage punk. The mealy chicken-wire guitars, the messily dissatisfied lead vocals, the sense that this trio had to cut their demo in a condemned tenement seconds before a wrecking ball came crashing through: It's all there. The songs on the group's demo bear names like "Scared," "Dilettante," and "Get Out" and give the listener a pretty good feel for where these guys' heads are at. It's the stuff of promise, of potential, or at least the potential to blow away one's demos in a live setting. - Village Voice


"Musicians of Queens: Single Red Cent"

From the hallways of Queens high schools to some of the City’s most popular venues, the punk- and metal-inspired band Single Red Cent has developed their home-grown, high-energy sound over years of practice and performance.

Vocalist Oscar Arias, a Bellerose native, and guitarist James Pagano, who grew up in Flushing, met at Benjamin Cardozo High School in Bayside, and played in a series of bands until meeting drummer Eri Kurshan in 2010.

“[James and I] know each other for so long, and when we got the drummer, it just kind of clicked,” Arias said. “We’re not that serious – I’m kind of a goofball and so is the drummer, a little bit, so we have a lot of fun even just hanging out.”

In Single Red Cent’s early days, Arias said, “we were kind of all over the place.” The group worked to hone and meld their sound, ultimately shifting genres slightly.

“I think we started off a little more alternative sounding, and then as we’re progressing, it’s getting a little harder and faster and bluesier,” he explained.

The band continues to progress, never completely abandoning the songwriting process.

“We have songs that are still years old that we’re still doing little tweaks to,” Arias said. “A song is never 100 percent finished for us, just because everyone’s kind of perfecting in their own little way.”

According to Arias, the three band members bring a diverse set of musical influences to the songwriting process. Joe Jackson, Elvis Costello and AC/DC are all important to him and to James, while he and Kurshan are “both big Metallica and Queens of the Stone Age fans,” he said.

On stage, the band members play conversationally, sometimes in call-and-response, demonstrating comfort with their instruments and a variety of beats and melodies.

Thematically, their songs deal largely with culture and social issues, often with humor and witty lyrics.

As a musician, Arias said he hopes to express “freedom, being who you are, the tension that arises from what you want and what’s expected, recognizing BS without getting too bogged down by it.”

“If I had to some it up in one word: live!” he added.

The band’s passion for life comes through in their strong and dynamic performance style.

“The songs are written that way so we just play them with a lot of energy,” Arias said. “Beer helps. But really, playing onstage is a huge adrenaline rush and we try to get that across.”

With one demo already released, Arias said the band is looking to record again in the future. To hear Single Red Cent live this spring, music fans can stop by the Grand Victory in Brooklyn on April 14.

More information about the band is available at singleredcent.com.

-Jackie Strawbridge - Queens Tribune


"New York Music Daily"

"... Single Red Cent- who mix sharp, socially aware punk with a more atonal Gang of Four/Neighborhoods vibe" - New York Music Daily


"The 100 Best Songs of 2012"

64. Single Red Cent – Dilettante. A hilarious postpunk-flavored putdown of spoiled trendoids, “stealing a page from the better bands, nothing in common with the working man.” - New York Music Daily


Discography

Still working on that hot first release.

Photos

Bio

A trio of native New Yorkers these three lads from Manhattan and Queens congregated in (where else?) Brooklyn in the fall of 2010. The songs came quickly and they had enough of a set to start playing out in December of that year.

In May and November of 2011 they recorded a 7 song demo in two stages at a friend's studio in Greenpoint in May and November of 2011.

On the heels of that demo they played live consistently throughout Brooklyn and Manhattan (Trash Bar became a second home to them, hosting them 5 times!) ultimately garnering enough attention to have the Village Voice proclaim:

"What NYC's Single Red Cent bring to bear is a raucously unkempt garage punk. The mealy chicken-wire guitars, the messily dissatisfied lead vocals, the sense that this trio had to cut their demo in a condemned tenement seconds before a wrecking ball came crashing through: It's all there. The songs on the group's demo bear names like 'Scared,' 'Dilettante,' and 'Get Out' and give the listener a pretty good feel for where these guys' heads are at. It's the stuff of promise, of potential, or at least the potential to blow away one's demos in a live setting."

...............

Oscar, the eclectic frontman singer guitarist, started out playing solo acoustic sets throughout the city eventually joining a diverse set of bands including White Wedding (an 80s cover group) a funk and Hendrix cover band and even a folk trio.

He was writing songs with a friend from high school when that friend suggested adding a classmate of theirs, James to the mix.

James, the pragmatic punk had just parted ways with local indie group Day Gone Mission and was eager to start fresh and when the three got together they realized they shared a mutual fervor for 70's punk and 80's post punk bands like the Who, Clash, Buzzcocks and Ramones.

Their classmate moved to Asia but the pair soldiered on with James switching over to bass, and when it came time to find a drummer they turned to the internet and unearthed Eri.

Eri, the prog-metal percussionist started playing Misfits covers in college and was searching for a project that could showcase his unique sense of rhythm and time and found a good fit with Single Red Cent.

Band Members