Chamberlin is the biggest band from Vermont that no one there has ever really heard of. As their debut album Bitter Blood (Roll Call/EMI) drops, the eight-month-old act finds themselves criss-crossing the country in the midst of national tours, having played but a handful of shows in their home state.
Last fall, before finishing Bitter Blood, the only people Chamberlin had performed for were close friends and flames during late night whiskey-fueled rehearsals at their mountainside cabin in Goshen, VT (pop. 200). There, last spring, Mark Daly and Ethan West wrote and demoed the nine songs that would make up the record. “We didn’t think much of them at the time — basically rehearsing with a microphone on — but those acoustic tracks had some legs,” says West.
By June the two recruited three other players, and Chamberlin was born. They took the name from a painting, perched on the cabin wall. By July, the group was signed to west coast indie label Roll Call Records. A month later they met with producer Scott Tournet and left the cabin to record Bitter Blood in Burlington, VT. Tournet plays guitar for Grace Potter And The Nocturnals, the most recent Vermont band with a national trajectory. Chamberlin would go on to follow in their footsteps — literally — kicking off 2011 supporting Grace & Co. on their sold-out winter tour.
“We were so busy with the record that by the time it was finished, we only played a couple times in Vermont before we had all these opportunities elsewhere come knocking on our door,” says Daly, the band’s lead singer/frontman. “Suddenly we found that we’d played in Minneapolis more times than Burlington and that we sell the most records in San Francisco.”
Up in their cabin, Chamberlin wrote a record stained with the influence of bonfires, harsh winters, geographical isolation and the women that seem to run perpendicular to their lives. From the electric opening track, “Fools” – a stormy, scathing rebuke of two lovers – to the resolute, mostly a capella “Sixty Days,” the nine songs on Bitter Blood are photographs, or perhaps photograms, of Chamberlin’s world, with varying degrees of aperture. Despite its title, Bitter Blood is not without pleasantries. For the band, while contemplative, is not jaded. “Turn Around,” the B3-laden third track, may even sound best as a drink-in-hand, late-night back porch sing-along. After all, “bitter blood,” as the title track asserts, “breaks like a cigarette.”
On his upcoming release Another Day (Eusonia Records, 2011), Zach Deputy demonstrates his extraordinary ability to perform and record in multiple contexts and conveys the sensibilities of a mature singer/songwriter. Another Day offers another look at Zach Deputy and seeks to help him cross over into other audiences. Rich with ballads and mid-tempo songs, the music on this recording is best described as soulful rhythm and blues, with flavors of Al Green, Taj Mahal and Stevie Wonder emerging in the swells, changes and modulations of the music, in the voice …
Read the full story »w/ Adam Ezra Group
Rusty Nail Bar Stowe, VT
All Ages | $12 Advance | $15 Day of Show

Sunday February 12th | 8PM
$8 advance | $12 Day of show

This Saturday, January 14, Big Heavy World, Halogen Media and consummate Queen City scene booster Joe Adler are hosting the Vermont Musicians’ Summit at the Higher Ground Showcase Lounge. The idea is to offer local musicians, representatives and other assorted folks the chance to gather in one place, swap war stories, network, share ideas and, of course, rock out. It’s like a business social mixer, minus the annoying business people. Also, I’m told there will be hors d’oeuvres.
The First Annual
Vermont Musicians’ Summit
with Kat Wright & Indomitable Soul Band, Soule Monde, Something with Strings, The Human Canvas, The Wind Woods w/ Brett Hughes, The Smittens, Anna Pardenik + More!
Joe Adler (Radio Bean), Jim Lockridge (Big Heavy World), and Justin Hoy (Halogen Media) are partnering up to present “The 1st Annual Vermont Musicians’ Summit”, Saturday, January 14 @ Higher Ground in their Showcase Lounge. This very special event, with the goal of bringing the local music community together, is a call to action directed at Vermont’s musicians and music …
When it comes to real DJing, DJ G.I. Joe (Immortal Tech’s DJ) should be one of the poster boys. His skills on the turntables were incredible. Real scratching, some hyped up talking and an attitude to play whatever he felt like playing while showcasing his work. At one point, someone in the crowd gave him a thumbs down and told him to pick something else, to which he picked up the microphone and said, “I play what the fuck I want. Fuck you.” The crowd cheered. There was a lot of that during the night.
http://www.7dvt.com/2011thanks-again
Well, here we are once more. Another Thanksgiving and another incredibly slow week for local music. Every year, this is one of the most challenging columns to write cuz there’s just not much on the docket. So as has become Soundbites tradition, we’re leading off with a few things I’m thankful for this Thanksgiving week.
It’s been a tough year for Vermont, most notably dealing with that uppity bitch, Irene. But it’s also been heartening to witness the response, especially from the local music scene. A few million dollars here from …