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| Mike Olson and Rachael Price |
Mike "McDuck"
Olson was a student at the New England Conservatory in Boston,
Massachusetts, when he selected fellow students to implement his vision for an
indie country, jazz and soul band in 2004. The guitarist/trumpet player
recruited lead vocalist Rachael Price,
who was from outside Nashville, Tennessee, stand-up bassist Bridget Kearney, an Iowa native, and
drummer Mike Calabrese, of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Price and Kearney both grew up singing in choirs, most
of the members had classical music training growing up, and all of them had developed
a background in jazz. Olson named the band Lake
Street Dive after a street with many dive bars in his hometown of
Minneapolis, Minnesota.
The band submitted a song written by Kearney to the John
Lennon Songwriting Contest in 2005. Kearney won the jazz category, and with the
cash and 1000 CDs award, Lake Street Dive recorded and pressed a debut CD in
2006. Lake Street Dive later gained national buzz via YouTube with a video shot
on a street corner in Brighton, Massachusetts, featuring the band gathered
around a single microphone performing a cover of the Jackson 5 song "I Want You Back." In December 2013, T Bone Burnett asked Lake Street Dive
to perform at the Another Day, Another
Time show at Town Hall in New York City featuring music from and inspired
by the film Inside Llewyn Davis. The press
raved about the performance, and Lake Street Dive went from playing for friends
to headlining venues around the world. The band is now based in Brooklyn, New
York, and released the Bad Self Portraits
album in February 2014.
Lake Street Dive strolled onstage tonight at the Bowery Ballroom as Tom Jones' "What's New Pussycat" blasted through the house
speakers. The quartet launched into the rolling mid-tempo "Got Me Fooled"
to cheers and applause. Price then thanked the fans for coming out to the show
and added "We can't tell you how happy we are to be at home." The
band then performed "Stop Your Crying" like a 1960s Brill Building tune
and the cast was set; it would be an evening of pop and soul songs, with several
songs highlighting four-part harmonies.
Although all four members are songwriters, Price was the band's
centerpiece. She sang with a powerful voice, but her juicy style and commanding
inflection impressed more. She did not always reach her notes clearly, but the
imperfections were masked easily by her enthusiasm and by the musical arrangements.
When Price stepped back, Olson frequently filled in the soft spots with modest guitar
licks and trumpet blasts, giving pep especially to "Neighbor Song," a
song about being kept awake by your neighbors' sexual activities, and "Hello?
Goodbye!" Kearney danced with her upright bass and it was the engine driving
hard grooving lines on "Henriette" and "Bobby Tanqueray."
Calabrese's smooth drumming stayed where it was supposed to, in the background,
but his backing vocals gave life to "Seventeen" and other songs. Sam Kassirer, the producer of the
band's most recent album, joined the band on keyboards about halfway through
the show and filled out more of the sound. The band closed with "You Go
Down Smooth" and returned for a one-song encore, a lengthy cover of Hall & Oates' "Rich Girl."
That final blue-eyed soul connection spoke volumes, linking Lake Street Dive's
present style to a long history of soulful pop radio standards.
Visit Lake Street Drive at www.lakestreetdive.com.

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