http://www.bottomofthehill.com         http://www.facebook.com/bottomofthehill http://twitter.com/bottomofthehill https://instagram.com/bottomofthehillsf/ feed://www.bottomofthehill.com/RSS.xml
CALENDAR CLUB INFO BOOKING SCRAPBOOK HIGHLIGHTS

click on month for monthly picture calendar 
http://www.bottomofthehill.com/iC202106.htmlhttp://www.bottomofthehill.com/iC202108.html http://www.bottomofthehill.com/iC202109.html http://www.bottomofthehill.com/iC202110.html http://www.bottomofthehill.com/iC202111.html http://www.bottomofthehill.com/iC202112.html http://www.bottomofthehill.com/iC202201.html•••http://www.bottomofthehill.com/iC202205.html http://www.bottomofthehill.com/iC202206.html

Listings are in the opposite order of appearance: headliner is listed at the top, next is the support band(s), and the last band listed is the opener.


Bookmark and Share







>>back to listings calendar
>> back to picture calendar
Friday August 20 2021
 8:30PM doors -- music at 9:00PM
 
•••  21 AND OVER
$12 in advance / $15 at the door
Harold Ray & East Side Dynamite  
www.facebook.com/HaroldRayAndEastSideDynamite
 rock, roll and soul
Semprini 
 (debut show)
 featuring  members of
Overwhelming Colorfast, Titan Ups, Creeper Lagoon, Trip Wire

www.facebook.com/semprini123
 Power Pop, 60's psych folk
Luke Sweeney  
lukesweeney.com
 garage psych



Harold Ray & East Side Dynamite   
-from Oakland, CA
-Harold Ray and East Side Dynamite are an explosive rock, roll, and soul band. We can be lit for your pleasure, it just takes money. Florida to Oakland transplant Harold Ray, aka Jason Morgan is an American soul-singer/performer. Equal parts master showman and work-a-day hero, Harold Ray gained local-fame in his early bands Harold Ray Live in Concert, Eastbay Grease and Total BS. His current list of rock-and-roll hot shots, East Side Dynamite are determined to light the fuse to the grooves, and a blasting cap for your moves. Pick up the phone: high energy, soul-drenched rock and roll is stalking you!




Semprini 
 (debut show)
 featuring  members of
Overwhelming Colorfast, Titan Ups, Creeper Lagoon, Trip Wire

Bob Reed - Guitar, Vocals
Dan Carr - Bass, Vocals
Marty Schneider - Guitar, Vocals
Dan Reed - Drums, Vocals
-from San Francisco, CA

-Semprini is the latest in a long tradition of San Francisco-based indie rock bands.  What sets them apart is this one is fronted by Bob Reed whose early 90’s brush with fame Overwhelming Colorfast was the inspiration for Noise Pop, San Francisco’s finest music festival. Bob’s brother and founding member of Overwhelming Colorfast is back on drums and it’s not hard to tell he’s been playing with his brother for most of their lives. Joining Dan in the rhythm section is Dan Carr (MK Ultra, Creeper Lagoon, Court & Spark…) on bass and harmony vocals and Marty Schneider (Trip Wire) on guitar.  They are currently finishing their debut album of original material at El Studio in San Francisco.




Luke Sweeney 
-from San Francisco, CA
-Dubbed a “pillar of San Francisco's garage-psych community” and “one of the best writers and performers working in the indie scene today”, Luke Sweeney has been a working musician for over a decade, playing with a wide variety of cohorts such as Tim Cohen (Fresh & Onlys) and Healing Potpourri.  His personal output sparked critical interest from the outset, with his self-released 2013 solo debut ‘Ether Ore’ garnering praises for its “distinctly handcrafted feel” and “melodies that feel like opiates for the soul” (San Francisco Chronicle).  Then Sweeney’s 2014 full-studio breakout ‘Adventure:Us’, recorded in Brooklyn with longtime friend and collaborator Robin MacMillan, “expanded into far-reaching pop, psychedelic, and classic-rock realms with humor and irreverence” (Portland Mercury).  A “kaleidoscopic whoosh of psych-pop, indie-folk, lo-fi soul and futuristic blues” that “confounds aural expectations and puts the knock on reverence” (Austin Chronicle), the record was already in the periphery of Sweeney’s musical consciousness by the time his van and band were scraping across westerly cities of the U.S.

In between tours, Sweeney was working on songs that would make up the album ‘Peace Meal’ from his San Francisco apartment overlooking the Pacific Ocean.  Tracking Garageband demos in the quiet of the night - with an occasional N-Judah train purring through - Sweeney’s goal was to make this record quickly, before he could question the meaning of it all.  The songs came to life in 2015 from tireless studio sessions in Brooklyn and SF - but were left in cosmic limbo while MacMillan meticulously arranged accompaniments from some of NY’s finest (Frank LoCrasto, Christina Courtin, Jacob Silver) and brought the mixes around.  Sweeney kept busy playing the part of the gangly trouble-making troubadour, hosting residencies at Brick & Mortar Music Hall, Make-Out Room, and Amnesia (RIP) in San Francisco as well as supporting the likes of Jessica Pratt, Sugar Candy Mountain, La Luz and Night Moves; dragging his ‘strange pop sensibility’ through the American landscape over the course of near-constant tours and festivals - including three consecutive years of SXSW appearances.  Then, on a fateful night in April 2018, just as the final mix of the ‘Peace Meal’ record was sent, an astrological grip intercepted Sweeney’s life when he awoke to find his infant daughter no longer breathing.

The loss of a child is a pain and grief like no other.  Yet, eventually, Sweeney came to understand his daughter as much more than just a child: she’s an infinite being that serves as his guide, his teacher, his muse.  In the process of healing, it became clear that the very songs laying motionless after countless hours of labor, meditation, and deliberation on the studio floor were exactly the ones he needed to hear.  Lines like “You hear me now, across the great divide” indicated to Sweeney (or rather, reminded him) that there is life beyond what we physically inhabit.  Furthermore, the realm of subconsciousness is typically where Luke Sweeney draws his greatest inspirations.

So, the long-awaited arrival of ‘Peace Meal’ feels like something of a rebirth, in that the songs are the fruit of a communicative collaboration between this plane of existence and another; stuff of the cosmos that Sweeney has been personally tasked to deliver.  As one writer put it upon listening: "It is easy to hear why this album has a healing quality for Sweeney; Peace Meal digs deep and balances a strong introspective slant with melodies reaching out for listeners and inviting them into its musical world. It deserves consideration as his finest work yet" (Too Much Love).  Meanwhile, breezy melodies and buoyant beats showcase what is musically Sweeney’s most pop-oriented album to date: “a smorgasbord of influence: there’s Kinks and T. Rex, there’s Mungo Jerry and the smallest touch of Latin vibes; waltzy beats. Above all, the lyrics are clever, kooky and funny and god bless him, they’re interesting…  Sweeney writes songs with a connective energy about them. This Sweeney has soul” (TheBayBridged).  Moving forward and getting back on the proverbial horse, Luke Sweeney had these words to offer - ”When the wheel stops spinning and the gears fall apart, the consciousness of the artist comes alive and puts a beat back into our collective heart.” - Hank Earring, 2020