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| Dave Hosking |
Dave Hosking first
gained local attention with a song he uploaded for a local radio station in his
native Sydney, Australia. In time, he met another singer-songwriter, Killian Gavin, and the pair started
jamming together. They met bassist Jake
Tarasenko and drummer Tim Hart,
both of whom had fronted their own groups, and they became Boy & Bear, an indie folk-pop band, in 2009. When Hart's
brother, Jon Hart, joined on banjo,
mandolin and keyboards, the quintet's line-up was complete. (Tarasenko was later replaced by present bassist Dave Symes.) The band's 2011 debut
album, Moonfire, earned the band five
prizes at the 2011 Australian Record Industry Association (ARIA) Music Awards.
The follow-up album, Harlequin Dream,
reached the top of the ARIA Albums Chart in its debut week in 2013.
At the Bowery
Ballroom tonight, Boy & Bear provided a pleasant blend of folk, pop and
light rock. The band opened with "Three Headed Woman," a raw rocker
featuring a rousing guitar solo. The second song, "Rabbit Song," was more
serious, a commentary about having to join the rat race. From there on, the
show settled into a more leisurely flow. Dave Hosking, the mustachioed lead
singer, was the band's focal point, and he was an engaging front man,
interacting with the audience in a modest, homespun manner. The largely laid-back
repertoire consisted of sunny, melodic anthems, infused with guitar, banjo, mandolin
and keyboard riffs, but especially with plenty of lush vocal harmonies. The rich,
delicious harmonies were critical to the sound of Boy & Bear, and Hosking enjoyed
ample support from his four band mates. When all five band members sang, the songs
breathed at their best. It was not quite Australia's answer to Mumford & Sons, nor was it a new Fleetwood Mac, but perhaps the music
fell somewhere in between. Boy & Bear's presentation came across as sincere,
sophisticated and seductively impressive.
Visit Boy & Bear at www.boyandbear.com.

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