River Ghost
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River Ghost

Austin, Texas, United States | SELF

Austin, Texas, United States | SELF
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"RIVER GHOST - In For The Winter EP"

RIVER GHOST - In For The Winter [EP]

by Denise Britt
 
River Ghost is comprised of 4 young men from Austin, Texas.

The band formed in July of 2011 in South Austin, getting inspiration for their name from a Jack Kerouac novel; I was blown away when I saw that these guys have been together only 7 months:  they gelled so well.

I would say their music is Indie rock with flair of something folksy. I love Jamie’s vocals, they are sincere, sweet and unpretentious. Some of the songs have a meditative vibe to them. I think these guys have a bright future; I’ve reviewed very similar artists that are topping the charts right now and River Ghost has the same potential. 
 
In the spring of 2012 River Ghost will begin touring and - based on what I’ve heard from this first 6 track EP - I will be going to see them live, and so should you if they play anywhere near you. Hopefully we'll have a chance to see them as well at SXSW.

EP Track list is as follows:
 1. Lay Me Down.  2. Golden Houses.  3. Arms.  4. Desert Soul.  4. Lonely Bastards.  5. Road Song  (Lonely Bastards is my personal fave)


Good job my fellow Austinites. Good job.



River Ghost are:
Jamie Paris - Vocals, Electric Guitar, Acoustic Guitar. 
Chris James – Drums. 
Stuart Edward Davis - Bass Guitar. 
Robert Cap - Lead Guitar.
 
 
- Sonic Shocks - Denise Britt


"Freak Out! Drop Out"

City Life Article
Freakout! Drop Out City Life Article

For far too many downtown cheerleaders, revitalization means picking on the homeless, destroying the all-ages scene, promoting soulless condo dwelling and interpreting hipster bar openings as evidence of our town's cultural viability. It's all bullshit, of course, unless you have the actual artists -- visual, musical, culinary -- necessary to make the revitalization genuine and worthwhile. Otherwise, it's just a bunch of Netflix-addicted yuppies moving into the urban core and pushing the lower classes out to the suburbs.

Naturally, it's up to folks without government or corporate backing to provide the artistry. Promoter/DJ Jason Sturtsman is one of these folks. His regular all-ages gathering at the Box Office (a downtown art gallery) is called "Freakout!" and its mission is "to promote young local Las Vegas artists and help with the downtown revitalization that is happening in the Arts District and the Fremont East Entertainment District."

He has been putting together downtown shows for a while now, and had planned on organizing only three "Freakout!" shows, but the success of the first two has convinced him to continue the every-other-month series well into 2007.

"We're trying to bring back psychedelia and shoegazer rock," insists Sturtsman. "We want to highlighting the best in local and regional indie music, too. We've got a projector that creates the old '60s gel effects for the bands that want it."

Sturtsman wants to contribute to the cultural shift the monthly First Friday event has helped generate, and add his own unique part to the larger Arts District scene. "Yes, there's First Friday," he says, "but during the 29 other days, hardly anyone's coming downtown. I'm working with people like [local musician/writer] Aaron Thompson on collaborative events that combine all the different art modalities. For example, I think it's great to expose people to modern dance. Kids in Vegas won't see this stuff outside of UNLV.

"At the same time," he adds, "we want to showcase a group like Lit Community Consciousness, who are interpretative dancers and creators of their own line of sustainable fashion that is made from materials that are not harmful to the environment."

Sounds very warm and fuzzy, doesn't it? Well, don't worry. Sturtsman has assembled a bizarre collection of bohemians that runs the gamut from sideshow performers to interpretive dancers, from eco-fashion shows to alternative puppetry, from indie-folk pop to experimental noise rock. However, before you dismiss "Freakout!" as another, well, downtown freak show involving young artists who aren't old enough to know better, you need to hear a musician like Jamie Paris.

Paris -- who's about as far away from psychedelia and shoegazer rock as you can get -- has posted a few songs on his MySpace page (myspace.com/jamieparis) that display that rarest of talents: the ability to sing in tune and fingerpick an acoustic guitar like he's been sleeping with it under his pillow for years. His songs possess poetic vulnerability and a deep knowledge of earlier folk-music formats: Bob Dylan, Nick Drake, Cat Power.

Paris had played a downtown show that Sturtsman was DJing. Sturtsman mentioned he was putting together a "Freakout!" show every other month and asked Paris to take part in it all. "I see Freakout! as being this laid-back, cool collective of different kinds of artists," says Paris. "What's most exciting for me is how the originality that everyone brings to the show."

Jamie says he's played piano since he was 8, and after spending his high-school days as a teenage thespian in Vegas, he then switched to guitar. Although he's only been writing songs for two years, his rough demos contain the necessary polish to make him a big star. Paris, however, remains humble, preferring instead to talk about his good friend Ian Shane Tyler (formerly known as Red Light School District), who will be manning the keyboard in Paris' backup band.

"Like with Ian joining my band," adds Paris, "Freakout! is about people who are passionate about music, and that's what matters to me. That's why I'm a part of it."

In any case, it'll be interesting to witness the juxtaposition of Paris' introspective balladry with the highly unusual spectacle of Swing Shift Sideshow, a two-person performance team that specializes in things like sword swallowing, which doesn't sound all that unusual ... until you realize the swords are on fire.

While there's another "Freakout!" slated for April, next month Sturtsman hopes to unleash another all-ages event, something called "Disguised Monkey," which will focus exclusively on experimental music and film by local artists only.

"It's the only way the downtown arts scene can survive," insists Sturtsman. "We've got infuse new talent into the community."

Freakout! starts at 4 p.m. Sat., Feb. 17 at the Box Office, 1129 S. Casino Center Blvd. (in the Arts District). Admission is $8. Info: 388-1515 or lvexperimental.org. - Las Vegas CityLife Magazine


"SOUNDING OFF: Look for big things from these locals"

It's a new year, time for some new noise.

The past 12 months saw a slew of Las Vegas bands get signed and begin making an impact both locally and nationally.

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So who's next? Here are some of my favorite young acts worth keeping an eye on in 2007 and, hopefully, beyond.

She Turned Us Into Trees!: One minute, members of She Turned Us Into Trees! are plucking at your heartstrings, the next minute they're clawing them from your chest and strangling you with them like piano wire.

This bunch punishes pop-punk for all its sins -- namely, A Simple Plan -- with bipolar freak outs that are melodic and menacing at once.

At times, the band takes its cue from the breathless sugar rush of the Descendents, with fleet, lovelorn pop nuggets and a frontman who channels the sweet, unaffected whimsy of a young Daniel Johnston.

But then it puts the thumbscrews to the genre with blood-letting shrieks and touches of gruff hard-core -- often during the same song.

The result is a sound as exquisitely pained as love itself.

Jamie Paris: This gifted, 20-year-old singer-songwriter trades in heartache with a voice so delicate, it sounds as if it were made of porcelain. He pens lonely, magnificently sad songs, often backed only by an acoustic guitar and two decades of longing.

Paris' forthcoming debut is set to be produced by former Red Light School frontman Ian Shane Tyler, an ace songwriter himself, so expect big things -- not that you'd know it from this unassuming young talent.

"I am foolish and temporary," he writes on his MySpace page.

Thankfully, his tunes are anything but.

Perhapz: Coming with blue-collar rhymes about being broke and drunk in public, Perhapz is a hard-nosed MC with a chip on his shoulder that far outsizes his bank account.

This is a good thing, because it informs his spare, hardscrabble raps with a hunger and a longing that aches like an empty belly.

A member of the loaded Campfire Music crew, one of the leading lights of the Vegas hip-hop scene, Perhapz rhymes in a steady, hard-eyed drawl, sounding best in austere settings where voice can resonate like gunfire.

"Life ain't nothing nice these days," he announces over a classical guitar lick on "Shot in the Dark (Insufficient Funds)." "Just trying to make it that way."

And he's making progress.

Kissin Hands Shakin Babies: In a city defined by gluttony, these dudes offer up a buffet of cast-iron riffs and needle-in-the-red blast beats for self-flagellating types to gorge on.

This city's death-core underground is booming with a slew of rising bands -- Never Ending War, Misericordiam, the Atrocity Complex, to name a few -- joining a scene already loaded with heavy-hitters.

KHSB stands out with an oppressively heavy sound that tempers a doomy crawl with manic grind and some over-the-top drumming that flies by like bullets whizzing past your head.

And the band has a sense of humor, too, so at least you'll go out with a smile on your face.

Jason Bracelin's "Sounding Off" column appears on Tuesdays. Contact him at 383-0476 or e-mail him at jbracelin@ reviewjournal.com. - Las Vegas Review Journal


Discography

In For The Winter EP

Photos

Bio

River Ghost is an indie rock band from Austin, Texas that formed in July 2011. But don’t let their novelty fool you: The band has already achieved a great deal of success, having completed their six song EP “In for the Winter” and a west coast American tour.

If you like meaningful, upbeat music that dabbles in folk and post-rock, then you’ll love River Ghost. It’s not hard to imagine why Sonic Shocks wrote, “These guys have a bright future.”

The first 4 songs on this EPK are rough demos of the songs that will be on the upcoming EP.

Look for the band’s 2nd EP this fall and continue to check back for tour dates.

-Jon Fortenbury

for booking inquiries please email riverghostmusic@gmail.com