The Illinois Times: “Punk Paradise In Southtown”

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Many of you have been excited today (aside from all the snow) about a feature story in this week’s issue of The Illinois Times about Southtown and all of the businesses and people that make it a creative hub of Springfield. Pictured on the front of The Illinois Times (above) is Brandon Carnes of South Town Studio. The actual article spans five pages and covers much of what is going on inside Southtown including Dumb Records, The Black Sheep, Skank Skates, Boof City Skate Shop, South Town Studio, Clay’s Popeye’s Barbeque, and even George’s gardening projects. From the article:

On a typical Wednesday evening in Southtown, one might enter through the front door of Dumb Records (1107 S. Grand Ave.) and pass young people (leather, tattoos and piercings optional, but prevalent) talking and casually perusing the LP, 45, cassette, CD and t-shirt stock or possibly engaging in a game of foosball. The music choices on the store speakers here can be eclectic – recent visits have featured selections from Slayer and the Mamas & the Papas. The atmosphere is casual but strangely energized.

Exiting Dumb Records through the back door will land you in an unpaved parking lot, and if there is a concert at Black Sheep that night it will more than likely be abuzz with even more young people – band members might be unloading equipment from vans or cars while other kids talk, smoke or just goof around. Music is often in the air, wafting from Southtown Recording studios, housed in the building directly behind Dumb Records, where proprietor and engineer Brandon Carnes offers practice space to local combos between recording sessions. He has recorded projects for more than 30 bands since opening there in February.

Check out the article online right here, which also features a live video of the band Looming playing at Black Sheep earlier this month on November 5th. You can also pick up a physical copy of The Illinois Times between now and next Thursday at various local businesses around Springfield. For those of you more interested in checking out some things that Southtown has to offer, many of the buildings here are going to be active during our first ever South Town Record Fair coming up this Saturday.

The Lamp: “Black Sheep Cafe Attracts Young Music Fans To East Side of Springfield”

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Lincoln Land Community College newspaper The Lamp recently featured an article on The Black Sheep Cafe, where they interviewed owner Kevin Bradford and also Drew Kodrich of Mouthsex and Asthma. Check out that article below:

Finding a place where you can listen to live music with good company is hard to come by in the Springfield area. Yes, there are many bars where people who are over the age of 21 can go, but what about teenagers or those who are under 21? The Black Sheep Café is a place where there is all kinds of live music and there is no age requirement. The music scene in this venue has been built over the years.

The Black Sheep Café opened in September of 2005. Kevin Bradford, Brian Galecki, and Cory VanMeter run it collectively. The Black Sheep is located on 1320 S 11th St, in the old Southtown neighborhood.

“The show times are random,” said Kevin Bradford. Weekends are the busiest and the cafe is usually open from 7-11 p.m., depending on how long each band plays.

There is a $5 cover charge and everyone is welcome. The fact that everyone is welcome, goes along with the name of the cafe.

The Black Sheep stands for those who might feel like “the black sheep” in society. It symbolizes those who might not feel like they fit in anywhere, but they are welcome there.

“We are like a family,” Bradford said.

There is also a record store called Dumb Records, which is located right next door and a skate park newly opened called Skank Skates; they have also opened a studio nearby too.

“We’ve kind of made that area our own,” Bradford said.

The Black Sheep is very community based and that is a main theme for this music venue.

“We’re making good out of bad,” said Bradford.

The area that The Black Sheep is in is not an area where most people go or wish to go due to the looks of it; the area that it is in is not well taken care of.

Bradford and the rest of the staff are trying to make that area more popular.

Many different bands play at The Black Sheep; most play the punk music style. Four to five bands play every night and each band plays for an average of 15 minutes.

Many of the bands are local, which allows for people to see the talent that is right in their hometown. Some of the local bands are Asthma, Kowabunga! Kid, and Jag.

Drew Kodrich is in a band, Asthma, which performs at The Black Sheep Café.

“I really enjoy playing there,” said Drew Korich, who is in the band Asthma. It performs at The Black Sheep.

Kodrich has been going there for a few years.

“The atmosphere is great,” Kodrich said. “Most of the bands play originals.”

The Black Sheep has had many touring bands also come through. They had a band from Japan play there called Ultrabide.

There have been many European bands and South American bands play there as well.

“We have loose booking,” said Bradford.

They allow the bands to book themselves and to be free to play. Normally the bands do not get paid to play, unless they are touring.

Most local bands want to play at The Black Sheep, so they contact them and book themselves to play. If the bands are more popular, the owners contact them to play.

“We are trying to make Springfield better,” said Bradford.

It allows for people to listen to music in a safe place, where they can feel accepted. It is a much safer place than it ever has been before. Many different music styles have come through, which allows for many people to enjoy what music is being played. 

“The Black Sheep is known for good things,” said Bradford.

Dumb Fest Articles All Across America

tumblr_mqt1dfee1A1qel1kro1_1280Hey remember that crazy festival we had last June called Dumb Fest? And remember the great article that the State Journal Register did about the festival and punk music in Springfield? Well some of you may have forgotten the story but here we are later in the summer and the story of Dumb Fest is now sweeping the nation and touching the hearts and lives of many. Somehow that picture above ^^ got “tumblr famous” on the internet. We are not even exactly sure where the paper being pictured is located! Here’s another version of the article in an Indiana newspaper (which might have been recently taken down), and here’s another one online from some “Illinois news” site. You can find our original post on the Dumb Fest article here.

Dumb Fest happened June 14th and 15th earlier this summer. You can check out a bunch of pictures from the fest right here. Will there be a Dumb Fest next year?

State Journal Register: “Springfield Punk Scene Holds True To DIY Ethic”

IMG_3587g2e22e200000000000072d96f5806ce8dbe1ce15bdba821f4f34a318f79We are in the paper AGAIN? What’s it for this time? This time the State Journal Register has a long article in the “Heartland” section about punk music in Springfield. Black Sheep and Dumb Fest gets plenty of mentioning. The article also mentions many Springfield bands including NIL8, Soap Scum, Mildred, Montagh, Caterpillar Club , and more. To see the full article you can pick up a copy of the daily paper or check it out on the SJ-R site right here. Or you can read most of the article below. Special thanks to A. Marie Ball for writing the article and also to Ted Shurter for the photos!

When something upsets Jeff Brown, he might take a hammer to a cinderblock to vent his frustrations.

Or, he could use a wrench to bang on a 50-foot iron chain instead.

Either way, his goal is never destruction. All he’s doing is turning his anger into music.

Originally, that cinderblock, hammer, wrench, and chain were just tools he found on his farm in Cantrall. But with the help of technology such as guitar pedals, contact microphones and channel mixers, Brown can turn those common tools into instruments for his one-man band, Aporia, which creates harsh noise, or music that focuses on noise, such as the cacophony Brown makes when grinding on that cinderblock with his hammer.

The trick is sound distortion. For example, when Brown hooks his contact microphone up to part of an instrument and then hits it, the contact microphone will pick up on the vibrations within that object. Those vibrations make their way to a distortion pedal, creating “earsplitting static.”

He adds to that by screaming.

“It’s just me, screaming my heart out about things that make me mad,” he said.

Because of this, Brown considers his music to be punk-influenced.

Punk, a genre of music Brown calls “fast and angry,” also features real people talking about real issues — something Brown incorporates into his own style, not only by venting his anger but also by making sure he never takes more than 10 minutes for a performance.

Punk music helped Brown first bolster confidence in himself during his teenage years, and now the same genre is becoming a staple of Springfield’s music scene.

In 1982, NIL8 was the band that brought punk to Springfield (and is among the handful of local bands to experience national success). The punk music scene has been growing and changing here ever since.

“Springfield’s got it’s own unique ethic and vibe, which is pretty cool,” said Kevin Bradford. “We’ve got a really neat place here.”

Bradford is one of the original founders of The Black Sheep Café, a music venue at 1320 S. 11th St., that recently hosted DumbFest, a two-day concert featuring punk bands from around the country.

All of the bands were punk — but punk didn’t sound the same in each case.

“It’s (punk) more like a mindset,” said Cory VanMeter, who played bass guitar in The Caterpillar Club, Soap Scum and Say Something at DumbFest. “Lots of bands fall under that umbrella, but they all have a different sound.”

‘You show up and do it’

VanMeter, who also volunteers at Black Sheep, believes in a punk ethic more than a specific sound, or even a specific look. It’s a “do it yourself” ethic toward nearly everything the bands do, from booking the next concert venue to deciding what tracks will go on the next album.

“You show up and do it,” Bradford said. “If there were restrictions, it’d be like a height limit on a merry-go-round.”

Despite the success of punk and punk-influenced bands such as The Clash and Green Day, punk often doesn’t fall into step with mainstream record labels.

“It’s like, let’s do something opposite of that. Let’s do something we wanna listen to on our own terms,” Brian Galecki said.

He notes punk artists instead build small communities with other punk artists from other areas, play in each others’ towns and provide lodging for each other when they visit for performances.

“That’s what the whole purpose of having a punk scene is about,” Galecki said.

Galecki, another frequent contributor at the Black Sheep Café, coordinated DumbFest, and also provided vocals for Soap Scum. Bradford plays drums in Soap Scum and guitar in The Caterpillar Club.

Sometimes, though, bands that start out as being underground, or out of touch with the typical mainstream, get picked up by the mainstream anyway.

However, this doesn’t necessarily change those bands. For instance, a member of the band Fallout Boy spent the night with other musicians at Galecki’s house before a show the next day. And even though Green Day has become a household name, they still “do their own thing,” Bradford says.

In general, though, VanMeter notes that punk typically steers away from the mainstream.

Additionally, Bradford notes that the punk scene has its own type of media, with people doing interviews with bands for fanzines, or magazines created by fans.

Creating a scene

The punk scene isn’t limited to musicians, though.

Brittney Tyler and Aaren Hampson, both of Chatham, feel as though the punk community at the Black Sheep Café is where they belong, too.

“I like coming here because I’m not accepted a lot (elsewhere),” Tyler said.

She first started coming to The Black Sheep Café last year during Black Sheep Fest, another music festival the Black Sheep Café holds that features local bands.

A couple months ago, Tyler brought Hampson with her. He liked it, too.

“It was different, but I liked it,” he said. “The music was different, but the sets were great.”

Like Brown, both Tyler and Hampson could relate to the lyrics of the music they considered to be punk.

“I like punk because it speaks to me on an emotional level,” Hampson said. “I was never really liked by people, but punk made me feel like I belonged somewhere.”

Tyler also enjoys the Black Sheep community.

“I love how close-knit it is,” she said. “Everyone can just be themselves.”

On the walls inside The Black Sheep Café, Tyler once wrote, “This is my soundtrack, but you are not my critic,” which means, “This is what I’m into, and you can’t judge me for it.”

While she was inside, she noticed a painting on the wall. A flock of white sheep stand on one side, and a black sheep stands on its own, being fed. This, Tyler believes, also represents part of the underlying message behind the punk community: acceptance, no matter who someone is or what they look like.

Bradford, VanMeter, and Galecki say that when punk first started in the mid-1970s and early 1980s, there was a stereotypical punk look — green hair and combat boots.

Tyler and Hampson think there could still be a certain look to punk, but if there is, it’s not really that important. What’s most important, they believe, is what people listen to, and their beliefs.

Bo Mellado agrees, stating punk isn’t about “who has the most green mohawks.”

While Mellado feels accepted by the punk community at Black Sheep Café, he doesn’t think happiness is what brought many of these people to the punk community in the first place.

“A lot of people were drawn here because they were angry about something,” he said. “This place isn’t necessarily about having a good time. People come here because they’re not satisfied.”

Mellado, who has been coming to the Black Sheep Café since he was 14, is now 19 and writing music and providing vocals for his own band, Mildred. He notes that this generation of punk is full of positivity, and “not judging people for their choices.”

Quincy Curran, the bassist for Mildred, has been listening to punk since he was 13, and can now tell the difference between punk music and what’s put out on the mainstream.

“There’s a lot more energy being around this music than the mainstream,” he said.

Austen Connelly’s band, Montagh, plays folk instead of punk music, but he still has an understanding of punk music.

“Punk culture is doing what you want and getting help along the way,” he said.

Dumb Fest took place on June 14th and 15th at Black Sheep and Skank Skates. You can find pictures (which are still coming in) on our Dumb Fest flickr set.

Calling All High School Newspapers!

Well, hello there. I didn’t hear you come in.

Black Sheep is wanting to experiment in the advertising game. What better way to do that than in the area schools paper? That is where you all come in. We have tried our darnedest to get in touch with high school newspapers, but have had very little luck.

If you go to a high school and it has a newspaper, we would love to get in contact with the people who run it. If you have any information that points us in the right direction, please email it to blacksheepspringfield@gmail.com. Any little bit of info will help!