Fanatic is a music marketing company established by Josh Bloom in 1997 to build fan-to-fan connections between artists and the media. For 25 years, Fanatic has continued to help launch careers through the strategic advocacy of creative talent.
“The spookiest make-out record of 2023
or any other other year.” - Jedd Beaudoin, Strange Currency (KMUW/NPR)
J Hacha De Zola speaks about his new single “I’m High,”out
today, saying, “Despite one thinking of ‘getting high’ as a euphoric
experience, as any true addict will tell you, it soon stops being fun and
becomes a sickening, nauseating need.”
Hacha De Zola and his tribe — despite the upcoming
title of Without A Tribe, his crew is growing, and includes the
contributions of original member of Sharon
Jones & The Dap-Kings, Fernando
Vélez and the return of producer John
Agnello (Dinosaur Jr., Waxahatchee, Horsegirl) behind the mixing desk — have taken the sentiments of
today and mixed them with the sounds of yesterday.
“We’re doubling-down on what began with
the last album by borrowing heavily from my love of R&B, Soul, and Doo-wop
vocal harmonies and arrangements,” Hacha
De Zola explains. “‘Stay Away’
is heavily influenced by 70s funk grooves and R&B-stylized vocal harmonies.
Fernando is on percussion and was
truly instrumental in helping us lock in the groove and overall vibe.”
J Hacha De Zola is available for interviews. Please contact Josh
Bloom at Fanatic for more
info.
“I'm from New Jersey and no one likes Jersey,
particularly Secaucus where I was born,” says J Hacha De Zola. It’s a place of subtle dread, kinda like some
oddball Stephen King story. A very
different Jersey than Springsteen’s
Jersey. ‘A Day In Secaucus, New Jersey’
is a piece of ear candy. Raucous and noisy.”
+++
J Hacha De Zola | About
“Let’s just say I live in a very different Jersey than
Springsteen’s Jersey.”
J Hacha De
Zola speaks with authority about the
reality that he knows better than anyone who may mythologize his home state
through the songs of The Boss.
“With this album, I want to anchor myself as being
from ‘Dirty Jerzee,’ he jokes. “It’s a badge of honor, really, because this
place isn’t for the faint of heart.”
Hacha De
Zola was born in Secaucus, the
subject of “A Day in Secaucus, New
Jersey,” the opening track of Without A Tribe, his sixth album,
scheduled for release on June 9, 2023
via the artist’s own Caballo Negro
label. Former New Jersey-ian John Agnello,
known for his long career working with Dinosaur
Jr., Son Volt, and more recently Waxahatchee
and Horsegirl mixed Without
A Tribe.
Hacha De
Zola was described early on in his
career as “a wild man” (Paste), “unsettling”
(NJ.com), and “distant and strange”
(MAGNET), with creative genre labels
applied such as “Urban Junkyard,” “Baroque Pop,” “Avant-Indie,” “Downtown Goth,”
and “Boozegaze.” Comparisons to singers and front men ranging from Jim Morrison to Nick Cave, Tom Waits, Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, and Captain Beefheart followed.
On Without A Tribe, Hacha De Zola strips that hyperbole
back a touch and expands on the vocal delivery that he made a centerpiece of East
of Eden, his 2021 full-length.
“We’re doubling-down on what began with the last album
by borrowing heavily from my love of R&B, Soul, and Doo-wop vocal harmonies
and arrangements,” he explains.
To help accomplish this goal, Hacha De Zola reached out to Fernando
Velez, an original member of Sharon
Jones & The Dap-Kings.
“Fernando’s
deep knowledge of Soul music was the key in getting the sound we wanted on this
record,” Hacha De Zola says. “We are
very inspired by the New York, Philadelphia, and New Jersey vocal group styles
from the 60s and we hope that we have re-imagined these sounds in a way that
feels fresh.”
With the sonic styling of the record more focused than
ever, Hacha De Zola’s darkness
becomes less “wild,” “unsettling,” or “strange.” Now it lurks, with a kind of
menace and torment that emerges from his vulnerability and pain.
“It’s a place of subtle dread, kinda like some oddball
Stephen King story,” Hacha De Zola says, returning to the
album’s jump-off about his home, “A Day
in Secaucus, New Jersey.”
As a PhD candidate who works in a lab by day, Hacha De Zola can’t help but apply science
to this assessment.
“A cloud of hydrogen sulfide — very toxic — settles
across Secaucus. The source is metabolic waste product from the bacteria put
out by the slaughterhouses in the area. If your car breaks down on those roads,
the gas can easily overcome you. That’s my Jersey.
“The song came to me very early on in my writing, but
I was only able to make it work for this album. It’s a piece of ear candy.
Raucous and noisy.”
Other singles expected from Without A Tribe include
the intriguingly titled “I’m High”
and “Do You?”
“Lyrically and thematically, I am revealing much more
of myself than ever before by facing some of the ‘meat hook realities’ of life,
such as becoming older, watching loved ones pass, and struggling with addiction
and recovery,” Hacha De Zola says.
“Despite one thinking of ‘getting high’ as a euphoric
experience, as any true addict will tell you, it soon stops being fun and
becomes a sickening, nauseating need. ‘I’m
High’ isn’t necessarily about intoxicating substances, but instead about
experiences, people, places, or things that start out positive but unravel into
something different altogether.”
Asked to describe “Do
You?,”Hacha De Zola is blunt.
“If you’re looking for a heart-warming love song, then
you’ve come to the wrong place. This one is a straightforward Motown-ish tune with all of the amorous
feelings of wanting to be loved and desired, but also being thoroughly clueless
and disconnected from the actual dance.”
The album’s closer “Drag Me Under” is something cinematic, with minimal lyrical
content, but heavy on the production. Big horns, baritone saxes, trumpets,
Balkan folk instruments, and banjos conspire to embrace a certain level of
absurdity.
It leaves little doubt that Hacha De Zola’s New Jersey is indeed different from Springsteen’s, but is still something Bruce would love.
Without A Tribe, the sixth album by J Hacha De
Zola, arrives on June 9, 2023
via Caballo Negro (distributed by Slow Start Records / Burnside / The Orchard) and preceded by the singles “A Day In Secaucus, New Jersey” (Out Now), “I’m High” (April 28), and “Do You?” (May 19.)
“Hypnotic indie pop and gently percussive low-fi
soul... Opal Eskar may very well
have captured laconic reflection better than anyone else in recent memory.” — Stereo
Embers
“The blissful sound of a group of musicians with their
own thing… but whose mutual respect for each other’s work inspires a creative
curiosity.” — Ghettoblaster
Magazine
+++
“As tough and debilitating as it may be at times,
especially when there are hard things to share, ‘The Woodsman’ is about how having an honest relationship makes for
a deeper relationship,” says Karl Blau
of the latest single from his new collaborative project Opal Eskar. “We made the video in my buddy’s backyard. We didn’t
intend for the mask to become a major theme, but the piece spontaneously worked
with that mask, and the trampoline footage highlights the northeast Philly vibe
pretty hard.”
After releasing their debut single “Sunlight Is Breakin’ Out” as a trio
comprised of Blau (vocals), Heyward Howkins (vocals, guitar), and Chet Delcampo (vocals, guitar, bass,
keys) last summer, Opal Eskar is joined
on their new recordings by two more members of the Philly fabric: Charlie Hall and Robbie Bennett of The War on
Drugs.
Blau met Howkins
and Delcampo after relocating to
Philly following a highly prolific period in the Olympia, Washington area where
he released dozens of records and helped nurture the scene that brought the K Records label and influential artists
such as Laura Veirs, The Microphones, and Earth — many of which Blau recorded and performed with — to
prominence.
Members of Opal
Eskar are available for interview. Please contact Josh Bloom at Fanatic for more info.
+++
Opal Eskar Self-Titled EP (Spiral Valley Records) May 19, 2023
“The track has a certain nostalgic quality...
a suitably dreamy affair, combining widescreen Americana with the smooth luxury
of The The or Matthew E. White.” —For
The Rabbits
“Blissful...
ethereal... an eclectically pleasing sound that brings to mind the more artsy
and mellow work of acts like TV On The Radio.” —Glide
+++
“When I first listened to ‘And Yet Love Rules,’ it sent me on a wave of nostalgia. Thus the
video is a rumination on nostalgia or memory – its imperfection, its fragments, and its
shifting prominence in our lives.” —Julie Casper Roth
“‘And Yet Love
Rules’ is about letting love be the governing force in exchanges with other
humans.We don’t know their story, we
can only assume we would be in their shoes if we were in their shoes. Let the
innocence of our inner child –the curiosity that permeates life –help lead our
actions and interactions.” —Karl Blau
“‘And Yet Love
Rules’ was musically conceived and captured to tape in the room with Charlie and Robbie (of The War On Drugs)
at the time of our first-ever session. We grabbed the overall vibe fairly
extemporaneously and quickly in the room that day. It was the musical jumping
off point of our Opal Eskar journey.”
—Chet Delcampo
+++
Opal Eskar | About
Opal Eskar is the latest convergence of some of Philadelphia’s
busiest indie musicians.
After releasing a one-off single “Sunlight Is Breakin’ Out” (“Dreamy,” said NPR-affiliate WXPN) as a
trio comprised of Karl Blau
(vocals), Heyward Howkins (vocals,
guitar), and Chet Delcampo (vocals,
guitar, bass, keys) last summer, Opal
Eskar is now a five-piece featuring two more members of the Philly fabric: Charlie Hall and Robbie Bennett of The War on
Drugs.
Opal Eskar will release its debut self-titled EP on May 19, 2023 via Spiral Valley Records.
To get an idea of the band’s sound beyond “dreamy”
(which it is!), look no further than the comprehensive careers of the members
of Opal Eskar and the company they
keep.
Blau met Howkins
and Delcampo after relocating to
Philly following a highly prolific period in the Olympia, Washington area where
he released dozens of records and helped nurture the scene that brought the K Records label and influential artists
such as Laura Veirs, The Microphones, and Earth — many of which Blau recorded and performed with — to
prominence.
More recently, Veirs, along with My Morning Jacket front man Jim
James, appeared with Blau on a
cover of Link Wray’s ten-minute epic
“Fallin’ Rain,” a cut from Introducing Karl Blau, a covers
collection of overlooked country songs by Blau,
released by legendary UK record label Bella
Union.
Delcampo has two earlier album releases to his name, as well
as another pair as Hong Kong Stingray.
His list of current and former collaborators is long, including Kid Congo Powers, Joel RL Phelps, and Dave
Lovering of Pixies. Last year he
released a single with Howkins as Later Fortune, called “lush,
sophisticated art pop” by Brooklyn Vegan.
Howkins has released two full-length albums of his own, and
is a founding member of the choral group The
Silver Ages with members of Dr. Dog
and The War on Drugs, the Grammy®-winning rock band that features
Hall on drums and Bennett on keys, the same instruments
they contribute to Opal Eskar.
Like Howkins
and Delcampo’s Later Fortune project, which covered David Bowie’s soul-noir classic “Win” (from the Young Americans album, which was
recorded in Philly), Opal Eskar
cannot help but be influenced by the man.
Delcampo says, “A few years after Bowie’s death, I was reflecting upon his methodology of assembling
an interesting cast of characters into the right room at the right time. Tony Visconti, Brian Eno, Nile Rodgers,
Mick Ronson, and many others.”
Inspired to assemble his own group of collaborators
this way, Delcampo reached out to Blau (whose work he had long admired)
and Howkins brought Hall and Bennett to the band.
Opal Eskar’s own song about modern love is the EP opener and
first single, “And Yet Love Rules.”Blau says the song asks us to “let love
be the governing force in exchanges with other humans. Let the innocence of our
inner child — the curiosity that permeates life — help lead our actions and interactions.”
That sentiment permeates the entire EP — the blissful
sound of a group of musicians with their own thing going on, but whose mutual
respect for each other’s work inspires a creative curiosity that makes it to
tape (yes, the EP is an analog recording!)
The debut EP by Opal
Eskar arrives on May 19 via Spiral Valley Records and preceded by
the singles “And Yet Love Rules” (Out Now), “The Woodsman” (Out Now)
and “Open Mind” (May 5.)
“There is something magical going on in this song
that’s impossible not to be moved by.” — Folk Radio; Sisters to play tribute to
uncle Harry Chapin next week.
+++
The Chapin Sisters(L-R): Lily Chapin, Abigail Chapin. Photo
credit: Adam Goldberg.
“There is an enduring warmth throughout this ode to
Brooklyn. A cathartic release and a farewell, not just to a place, but to the
memories which they bring back to life here. There is something magical going
on in this song that’s impossible not to be moved by.” — Folk
Radio UK
Listen
to The Chapin Sistersin
discussion with host Alex Green
on the latest episode of the Stereo
Embers podcast here!
Harry Chapin
at 80: A Retrospective — The Chapin Family Live in Concert
Weds., April
26, 2023 @ Keswick Theatre (291 N Keswick Ave, Glenside, PA 19038)
Harry Chapin was one of our most passionate, political, prolific
and inspiring songwriters. This Long Island icon has reached a milestone
birthday — his 80th — and his
family feels a celebration is in order! In the long rich history of Family
Groups in American Roots Music, The
Chapin Family has a special place. When these singers, songwriters and
extraordinary live performers come together, magic happens.
Tom Chapin, Steve Chapin,
Jen Chapin, and The Chapin Sisters (Abigail
Chapin and Lily Chapin) are all
award-winning musical artists with active careers and multiple recordings, who
just happen to be related, and who love making music together.
Two generations of the musical Chapin Family will gather to bring the songs of Harry Chapin to life. Backed by The Harry Chapin Band (including Big John Wallace and Howard Fields), the Chapin Family will perform Harry’s
classic songs, including “Cat’s In The
Cradle,”“Taxi,”“W•O•L• D,” and many more.
The Chapin
Sisters make you long to return to a
place you may have never been before.
“Bergen
Street” is the new single (Out Now, Lake Bottom Records) from Abigail
and Lily Chapin, the sibling members
of what looks like a folk music dynasty, but in reality, is a proud family that
has been making music for decades in the most humble of traditions.
Father Tom
Chapin is a Grammy®-winning
singer-songwriter, late uncle Harry
Chapin is a legendary artist and social justice activist (his #1 hit “Cat’s In The Cradle” is a timeless
classic), and grandfather Jim Chapin
was an esteemed jazz drummer.
The sisters’ first new music since 2017’s Ferry
Boat, “Bergen
Street,” which describes a stretch of Brooklyn road with its everyday “soot
in the window ruts” and “air that smells of the tire dust” is an example of
this humble and expertly crafted music-making.
It is voiced with stirring sisterly “blood harmony” in
a way that only a family band – especially one with such a long history – can
do.
“Lily wrote
‘Bergen Street’ as she was leaving
Brooklyn to move back to the Hudson Valley village that we grew up in,” Abigail explains. “It’s a bittersweet
ode. Not a sad moment, exactly, but wistful.
“We thought we’d be city people forever, but during
the pandemic, I eventually did the same thing. We packed up our little families
and moved back to the woods and the grass and the driveways.”
“I always write songs about places I leave,” Lily confides. “When I was first
writing ‘Bergen Street,’ I was still
feeling the sting of leaving the city behind. I think it never goes away. The
first time I played it for my daughter, she cried.
“It’s hard to process feelings of loss and leaving
things behind that you love. This song allowed me to remember what was unique
and to allow the memories to become more vivid.”
Brooklyn memories that The Chapin Sisters have built over a lifetime, and for their
family, many lifetimes.
“Our family is a Brooklyn family,” Abigail says. “Our Manhattan-born grandmother
claimed she had never been to Brooklyn until she moved there at age 30, but her
kids adopted a strong identity and connection to Brooklyn Heights.
“The six boys played their first concerts there as The Chapin Brothers in the early 60s
and even though the brothers eventually drifted out of the neighborhood,
Brooklyn Heights has remained our family touchstone.”
Lily adds, “The history of Brooklyn is steeped in our
childhoods. Our Dad’s childhood, his brothers, Grace Church choirboys... Our
Uncle Steve and family friend Phil Forbes pushing a piano up and down the
street in Red Hook to play tunes at Fort Defiance.”
Even though the sisters are now building their
memories outside of Brooklyn, the familial togetherness continues, and not just
in front of the microphone.
“We recorded ‘Bergen
Street’ at Lily’s house,” Abigail says, “This was surprisingly
challenging in ways.
“We’ve got four young children between us, and with
our husbands involved in the recording process as well, we needed to rope in
grandparents to take turns watching babies, cooking meals, doing dishes, and
swinging on swings in the yard.”
This style of working is giving the new recordings by The Chapin Sisters an even more
intimate sound, and though it may slow down the process, the process benefits.
“We are slowly making our way through our recordings,
one song at a time,” Abigail says. “It’s
been interesting to approach it this way, focusing on one thing until it’s
done, instead of flitting around from song to song.
“I guess leaving the city is a theme in our lives
right now, and it is showing up heavily in this batch of songs that will become
our next album.”
Like the brothers who drifted, it is hard to imagine
the sisters leaving Brooklyn behind for good.
When I come back
Will the streets recognize my feet?
Will the wind recognize
The air that I breathe?
This thoughtful tribute to Bergen Street – the place The Chapin Sisters left – assures that
it will never leave them.
“Bergen
Street” is the new single by The Chapin Sisters, out now via Lake Bottom Records.
“The spookiest make-out record of 2023
or any other other year.” - Jedd Beaudoin, Strange Currency (KMUW/NPR)
“I'm from New Jersey and no one likes Jersey,
particularly Secaucus where I was born,” says J Hacha De Zola. It’s a place of subtle dread, kinda like some
oddball Stephen King story. A very
different Jersey than Springsteen’s
Jersey. ‘A Day In Secaucus, New Jersey’
is a piece of ear candy. Raucous and noisy.” Listen now at Ghettoblaster.
Hacha De Zola and his tribe (despite the album’s title,
his crew is growing) — including the contributions of original member of Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings, Fernando Vélez and the return of
producer John Agnello (Dinosaur Jr., Waxahatchee, Horsegirl)
behind the mixing desk — have taken the sentiments of today and mixed with the sounds
yesterday.
“We’re doubling-down on what began with
the last album by borrowing heavily from my love of R&B, Soul, and Doo-wop
vocal harmonies and arrangements,” Hacha
De Zola explains. “‘Stay Away’
is heavily influenced by 70s funk grooves and R&B-stylized vocal harmonies.
Fernando is on percussion and was
truly instrumental in helping us lock in the groove and overall vibe.”
J Hacha De Zola is available for interviews. Please contact Josh
Bloom at Fanatic for more
info.
“The title speaks for itself,” says J Hacha De Zolaabout “Stay Away,” taken from his just-announced sixth studio album Without A Tribe, scheduled for release on June 9. “The song is a response to the personally, politically, and existentially overwhelming nature of theirrational and desperate times we’re living in. A snapshot of just wanting all the noise to stop!”
+++
J Hacha De Zola | About
“Let’s just say I live in a very different Jersey than
Springsteen’s Jersey.”
J Hacha De
Zola speaks with authority about the
reality that he knows better than anyone who may mythologize his home state
through the songs of The Boss.
“With this album, I want to anchor myself as being
from ‘Dirty Jerzee,’ he jokes. “It’s a badge of honor, really, because this
place isn’t for the faint of heart.”
Hacha De
Zola was born in Secaucus, the
subject of “A Day in Secaucus, New
Jersey,” the opening track of Without A Tribe, his sixth album,
scheduled for release on June 9, 2023
via the artist’s own Caballo Negro
label. Former New Jersey-ian John Agnello,
known for his long career working with Dinosaur
Jr., Son Volt, and more recently Waxahatchee
and Horsegirl mixed Without
A Tribe.
Hacha De
Zola was described early on in his
career as “a wild man” (Paste), “unsettling”
(NJ.com), and “distant and strange”
(MAGNET), with creative genre labels
applied such as “Urban Junkyard,” “Baroque Pop,” “Avant-Indie,” “Downtown Goth,”
and “Boozegaze.” Comparisons to singers and front men ranging from Jim Morrison to Nick Cave, Tom Waits, Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, and Captain Beefheart followed.
On Without A Tribe, Hacha De Zola strips that hyperbole
back a touch and expands on the vocal delivery that he made a centerpiece of East
of Eden, his 2021 full-length.
“We’re doubling-down on what began with the last album
by borrowing heavily from my love of R&B, Soul, and Doo-wop vocal harmonies
and arrangements,” he explains.
To help accomplish this goal, Hacha De Zola reached out to Fernando
Velez, an original member of Sharon
Jones & The Dap-Kings.
“Fernando’s
deep knowledge of Soul music was the key in getting the sound we wanted on this
record,” Hacha De Zola says. “We are
very inspired by the New York, Philadelphia, and New Jersey vocal group styles
from the 60s and we hope that we have re-imagined these sounds in a way that
feels fresh.”
With the sonic styling of the record more focused than
ever, Hacha De Zola’s darkness
becomes less “wild,” “unsettling,” or “strange.” Now it lurks, with a kind of
menace and torment that emerges from his vulnerability and pain.
“It’s a place of subtle dread, kinda like some oddball
Stephen King story,” Hacha De Zola says, returning to the
album’s jump-off about his home, “A Day
in Secaucus, New Jersey.”
As a PhD candidate who works in a lab by day, Hacha De Zola can’t help but apply science
to this assessment.
“A cloud of hydrogen sulfide — very toxic — settles
across Secaucus. The source is metabolic waste product from the bacteria put
out by the slaughterhouses in the area. If your car breaks down on those roads,
the gas can easily overcome you. That’s my Jersey.
“The song came to me very early on in my writing, but
I was only able to make it work for this album. It’s a piece of ear candy.
Raucous and noisy.”
Other singles expected from Without A Tribe include
the intriguingly titled “I’m High”
and “Do You?”
“Lyrically and thematically, I am revealing much more
of myself than ever before by facing some of the ‘meat hook realities’ of life,
such as becoming older, watching loved ones pass, and struggling with addiction
and recovery,” Hacha De Zola says.
“Despite one thinking of ‘getting high’ as a euphoric
experience, as any true addict will tell you, it soon stops being fun and
becomes a sickening, nauseating need. ‘I’m
High’ isn’t necessarily about intoxicating substances, but instead about
experiences, people, places, or things that start out positive but unravel into
something different altogether.”
Asked to describe “Do
You?,”Hacha De Zola is blunt.
“If you’re looking for a heart-warming love song, then
you’ve come to the wrong place. This one is a straightforward Motown-ish tune with all of the amorous
feelings of wanting to be loved and desired, but also being thoroughly clueless
and disconnected from the actual dance.”
The album’s closer “Drag Me Under” is something cinematic, with minimal lyrical
content, but heavy on the production. Big horns, baritone saxes, trumpets,
Balkan folk instruments, and banjos conspire to embrace a certain level of
absurdity.
It leaves little doubt that Hacha De Zola’s New Jersey is indeed different from Springsteen’s, but is still something Bruce would love.
Without A Tribe, the sixth album by J Hacha De
Zola, arrives on June 9, 2023
via Caballo Negro (distributed by Slow Start Records / Burnside / The Orchard) and preceded by the singles “A Day In Secaucus, New Jersey” (Out Now), “I’m High” (April 28), and “Do You?” (May 19.)