BrooklynVegan shares pictures of Ty Segall & The Muggers’ at Webster Hall
BrooklynVegan
“Infantile” is a good descriptor of Ty Segall’s current tour. This is not meant as derogatory, as much as a statement of fact.
“Infantile” is a good descriptor of Ty Segall’s current tour. This is not meant as derogatory, as much as a statement of fact.
In a standout moment from Chicago-born songwriter Ezra Furman’s excellent 2015 album Perpetual Motion People, the singer wails “I have got a lousy connection!”
Like so many younger siblings, Jonah Furman latched onto his big brother Ezra when Ezra received a gift that made him instantly cool: a brand-new acoustic guitar for his bar mitzvah.
Ty Segall had method behind his madness as he tore through 9:30 Club on Thursday night showcasing songs from his recent concept album, Emotional Mugger.
Probably the most prolific and reliable dude in rock right now.
Panache is thrilled to announce our official SXSW Showcase in Austin this year! We will be returning to one of our favorite local venues Hotel Vegas and taking over all day and night on Friday March 18th. The line up will feature Thee Oh Sees, CocoRosie, La Luz, Michael Rault, Stonefield, Dinner & more Panache […]
Some people go to concerts to hear the band play their songs, others go to watch incredible visual displays that certain band are known to deliver and others go to take part in the sweaty stew that is a large group of fellow music fans unleashing their inhibitions.
Let’s all just take a moment to step back and reflect on what’s been happening in realm of Australian music over the past decade, particularly across the southern coast. To say that the once arid musical wasteland from whence INXS, AC/DC and a slew of other acronymic cock-rockers emerged in the pre-Internet age has undergone something of a renaissance would be an understatement.
Every once in a blue moon, there comes along a band that will raise the musical bar and work standard of how a unit should operate. A rare breed that will continuously challenge what will be expected of them, but in turn keep producing records of such substantial merit that they do not get tiresome, predictable, or cliche.
King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard. Now say it again with an Australian accent. King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard. Too funny right? This is probably one of my favourite bands, yet such a random one.
The prolific San Francisco garage rocker Ty Segall has a gift for creating breezy pop melodies — which he then loves to warp and bury under avalanches of fuzz.
Ty Segall has reached a new plane in the realm of performance. His latest album Emotional Mugger is one that slowly grows on the listener.
While Tuesday nights are not usually an evening spent out on the town this Tuesday night you need to do so. Set aside some time on your schedule to partake in Ty Segall’s brand of organized musical chaos as he rolls into town for an evening of ear blistering music at the Variety Playhouse.
With their gonzo band name and mind-bending music released at a rate of a couple of albums a year, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard are the latest Australian psychedelic group making an impact.
Ty Segall anchored one of Neon Reverb’s most memorable single nights—September 11, 2012 at the Bunkhouse—so perhaps it’s fitting the California garage-rocker will help Las Vegas’ revered DIY music festival usher in its new era, at the same (relaunched) Downtown venue.
After the vicious, noisy and quite brilliant assault of support band YAK is over, King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard arrive to what sounds like ghost train music.
Ty Segall releases albums as if he has insider information on the amount of time we all have left on this planet and he does not want to leave anything on the table.
Last night, Mac DeMarco headlined a Planned Parenthood benefit at Brooklyn’s Music Hall Of Williamsburg, which also featured Kevin Morby, Mutual Benefit, and others.
Last night at Brooklyn’s Music Hall Of Williamsburg, genial indie rock everyschlub Mac DeMarco headlined a Planned Parenthood benefit that also included people like Kevin Morby and Mutual Benefit.
Ty Segall was the musical guest on last night’s “Late Show With Stephen Colbert.” Joined by his band the Muggers (King Tuff, Mikal Cronin, and more), he came through with a wild performance.
Ty Segall & The Muggers were in NYC last night to play The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. They performed “Candy Sam” from Emotional Mugger, and going with the title, Ty showered the audience with assorted sweets. Video of that is below.
After performing on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” Ty Segall and the Muggers did a free set at Baby’s All Right in Williamsburg, Brooklyn after 2AM on Friday, February 12.
Roaring out of Orange County in the late 2000s, Ty Segall is as known for his prolific output as he is his considerable onstage volume. Since 2008, Segall has released some nine studio albums, dozens of singles, a handful of EPs, and teamed up with like-minded bashers for collaborative albums and side projects.
Terrific San Francisco songwriter Ty Segall typically follows a timeworn formula, in which welcoming pop melodies come layered in antisocial fuzz.
Nous ne savons pas trop ce que prennent ces sept australiens, ou tout simplement s’ils prennent quelque chose.
There are three things about Ty Segall that will probably never change: The San Francisco garage-rock icon is a prolific songwriter, plays the guitar very well, and seems to live and breathe to do both of those things.
Could there be a better symbol of KEXP’s rebirth in our new home than the “Baby Big Man” that is Ty Segall?
Ty Segall’s 10th solo album, Emotional Mugger, dropped late last month and with that release came a 14-minute music video — directed by Matt Yoka and produced by F. Bermudez, Constance Melkonian and Segall—that has been described as “Troma’s version of Thriller.”
Last month, Vancouver-based musical personality Nardwuar the Human Serviette, best known for his eccentric celebrity interviews, suffered a stroke. Having since recovered, he’s returned today with his first interview since the emergency: a chat with Ty Segall.
“Emotional Mugger” neither abandons Ty Segall’s penchant for classically raw rock ’n’ roll attitude, nor does it find him resting in place.