Monday, April 14, 2014

Jimkata - Buffalo NY 12 April 2014



This past winter in Buffalo has been brutal.  And thankfully, Jimkata saved my life.  Okay, so that may seem like a far-fetched statement.  However, as a Florida girl finding myself in the coldest weather in which I have ever lived, Jimkata became my beacon of warmth during this otherwise artic winter. I discovered this Ithaca based four-piece at the Night Lights Fall Music Festival this past summer and it’s been a growing courtship ever since.  Sometimes, I am secretly convinced that Jimkata was conceived just for me. Somehow the music gods decided that I deserved a band that encompassed my love of 80’s new wave and 90’s alt rock with a jamtronica twist.  To my soul, their music is the perfect blend of every sound I love. 


A simple walk through the crowd at Nietzsche’s Saturday night was an insightful view into the cross section appeal this band possesses.  Heads to hipsters dig this band.  There are no cliques at a Jimkata show.  Instead, what you find is a sea of variety in search of the very same thing - that “sound”.  And Jimkata’s sound is so hard to describe because it spans over decades and genres. They don’t sound like anyone else, although at the right moments I am convinced I hear a homage to the Talking Heads or a tad bit of Umphrey’s McGee, but I can never be quite sure.  There is a 90’s alternative rock vibe that they own but I can’t quite put my finger on where its influence lies; perhaps a sign that these guys have actually done it right.  They are paying tribute to some of the greatest pop/rock music of the last thirty years without obvious recognition. They’ve created a sound out of love not imitation.

Last night, I noticed something about the way these four create and play their music.  Generally, like the rest of the crowd, I am too engrossed in the dance party that is a Jimkata show to watch the interaction amongst the band.  However, last night, as I captured the band through the single lens of my camera, I caught a brotherhood and passion that comes from a place of love.  There is no pretension. As I watched these four guys play with the crowd and for the crowd, I didn’t see any rock attitudes or on-stage tension.  I felt like I was watching four best friends play their music together.  Perhaps they are just good at faking it, but if that’s the case, we’re talking When Harry Met Sally good at faking it. By all appearances these boys create music to spawn fun.  I think that is why this band is so well received on the festival circuit. Jimkata‘s music is infectious, celebratory, and hopeful. 

Of the bands I currently listen to, Jimkata is probably the most radio friendly. They write songs with catchy hooks.  Lyrically, their words are crowd pleasures.  They are not afraid to write music that is interactive.  They allow their fans to join the live experience with plenty of sing-along type moments in almost every song.  There is a familiarity to their sound that you’ve never heard before but yet somehow, you have heard it before.  To paraphrase Churchill, Jimkata is a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma. My point, you can’t really describe them accurately.  You just have to see them. 


Saturday night’s show in Buffalo was the halfway point as the boys get a week off before venturing south and down the east coast for the second half of their tour.  The night’s set list provided some Jimkata classics while offering a mellower vibe in the overall feel to the night.  Raging was an option in more upbeat tunes like “American Cars” and “Chain Store”.  However, songs like “Low Low” and “Die Digital” offered the crowd a chance to just vibe on the flow.  We were treated to all four new songs from the Feel in Light EP.  And there was no shortage of the crowd belting out every word to these recently released songs, evidence that the new music has managed to connect to the fans with a quickness.

I don’t often love bands with multiple guitarists, so the fact that Jimkata has two guitarists is an oddity among my favorite bands.  Somehow Aaron and Evan don’t overpower each other.  There is no epic guitar struggle; no lead vs rhythm.  They each shine in their own moments.  That is another testament to how their sound works.  It’s harmonious even in its structure.  One of my favorite moments of the night was an impeccable face melting guitar solo from Aaron during “Electronic Stone”.  He plays with a quiet grace that hits you unexpectedly in the perfect moments. 

My only criticism of the band is that I secretly wish Evan would step away from the guitar more.  There is a sense of vulnerability in songs like “Chain Store” when he leaves the shelter of his instrument to present just a vocal front.  Maybe as a vocalist, I find it to be a connective conundrum.  Perhaps, I am partial in that I like to watch a vocalist present their skill set without armor. But those moments are so powerful and fleeting that it leaves me wanting more.  Even behind the guitar, Evan weaves mindful phrasing into tricky little earworms that you can’t help but sing along with him. 

I think it’s important to note Jimkata really is four guys truly doing the work of six musicians.  Beyond guitar duties, Aaron also handles keys.  Beside bass, Dave (and his sporty new mustache) also handles synth responsibility.  They all contribute vocally.  They create simple but unique harmonies that complement the complexity of their music.

The base to this band is a fundamentally incredible rhythm dynamic between Dave and Packy (drums). Let me digress for a minute to talk about the important of a band’s cadence in regards to drum and bass.  When it’s bad, you hear it.  A bassist and drummer that don’t sync well together sound primal but not in a good National Geographic kind of way.  It’s just raw and wrong.  It’s off putting. No matter how brilliant they may be individually as musicians, if the bassist and drummer don’t gel than nothing will ever sound right. Jimkata does not have this problem.  Even on slow tempo songs, Dave and Packy make you want to dance.  The core of their music is so right that you could replace Evan and Aaron with two monkeys and you would still want to dance to it.  I am not suggesting that either of those two should be replaced by primates.  That image in my head was too tempting not to share.  A rhythm section alone does not make a band but without a solid foundation, a band has no stability to build its sound.

And that sound… Ask anyone that has seen Jimkata live, and they will all tell you the same thing.  Be prepared to dance, be prepared to fall in love and welcome to the addiction.  You will want to see them again.  And maybe that’s the connection that their fans have.  No sorrows, no darkness, no regrets, no bitterness- just four guys creating a soundtrack of celebration that can make even a six month long polar vortex nightmare seem bearable.

The Set List

Nietzsche’s – Buffalo NY April 12th

American Cars   
When the Day Comes Nightshade >  
Roll with the Punches Lighter   
Die Digital >   
Beat the Curse   
Feel in Light 
Electronic Stone 
Daytime Fiction > 
Chain Store 
Low Low 
Swimming 
Feed

E:   
Intro/Sweet Glory
Legoland 
Devil's in the Details