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"When you’re not even halfway through your 20’s, jump-starting a
back-to-basics rock revolution seems a tall order. Judging by the rock
’n’ roll charisma radiated by the band members at their live shows —
long-hair-tossing, instrument-abusing, generally reckless affairs — they
are up to the task."
- The New York Times
"With dynamic live sets and slightly askew guitar-rock, it’s no wonder
the genre-breaking group from Red Bank, N.J., has earned the adulation
of fans and critics alike."
- BMI
“Basically, now is the time to go see them and say later on, ‘Yea, you
know, I saw them back before they took over the world,’ because that’s
the way things are heading.”
– The Aquarian Weekly
“Clever and intellectually stimulating…”
– The New York Waste
The Parlor Mob is a rock n’ roll band.
Artist's Web Site
See a YouTube clip from The Parlor Mob
Earl Greyhound began with the collaboration of songwriters Matt Whyte
and Kamara Thomas in the Spring of 2002 in New York City. The pair began
performing regularly as a duo on piano and guitar in NYC and began to craft the
sound that would become Earl Greyhound.
Whyte and Thomas developed the act into a much louder one with Matt on
guitar, Kamara on bass, an assortment of different drummers
and began playing in New York as Earl Greyhound. After having completed Soft Targets
in Brooklyn in the Fall of 2005
Earl Greyhound played New York City clubs a shitload despite the absence
of a permanent member on drums. One fateful evening at a gig at
Southpaw in Brooklyn, Earl
Greyhound found a friend in Roots guitar player
Kirk Douglass.
Douglass became a fan of the band and then brought his friend and
Gold Crowns
bandmate Ricc Sheridan to EG gigs for the next few weeks. It wasn’t
before long that Matt and Kamara realized they had found their dream
bandmate, or dreammate and Earl Greyhound hit the ground running with
Big Ricc Sheridan on drums.
Soft Targets was released in October 2006 on
Quicksand’s
Walter Schreifels New York label Some
Records. The album, and even more so the band’s live show, quickly
drew heaps of
critical attention as they relentlessly toured for the next year and
a half in the States,
Canada and Japan.
The Fall of 2007 was spent almost entirely in bigger, classier venues on
tour opening for Chris
Cornell and the band’s good friend
Shooter Jennings. After
three months on the road the band
safely landed back in NY and
began work at their
24th Street
space preparing for the release of their
sophomore album
Artist's Web Site
See a YouTube clip from Earl Greyhound
Presented In Conjunction With Landshark Entertainment
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