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The Reverse



Last Updated: 12/7/2009

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Status: Single
City: ALBANY&NYC
State: New York
Country: US
Signup Date: 2/21/2005

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Wednesday, December 26, 2007 

Current mood:  awake
The Year and a Half in Review, in Reverse

I have been meaning to document the past eighteen months or so and some of the events that supported the release of the debut Reverse album, The Longest Day of the Year (Heartcore, 2006). The following is a reverse chronology that pays tribute to a unique array of events of which I was privileged to be a part, including a faux talk show, several literary/musical events, and intimate Albany gatherings.

In Reverse Chronology (only appropriate)

1. Poetry Reading, The Bookery, Ithaca, NY July 2007.
Okay, this was not a Reverse show, but it was my most recent "public appearance" reading in Ithaca, New York with an amazing group of writers who, like me, were attending "Theory Camp", or the School for Criticism and Theory at Cornell, a six-week summer program for academics and aspiring academics. The reading was organized by poet Ray Hsu. I read three poems, and dedicated "Hearts Under the Sun" to my theory camp peeps.

1. NYC Popfest, the Delancey, May 30 2007 w/ The Secret History, Mitch Easter, et. Al.
We were invited to play this event by Tami, one of the organizers, who I knew well from the Mad Planets days. We were put on a Friday nite bill with The Secret History (for which Tod also plays drums). That weekend was a jolt out of sleepy Albany life. Traveling down from Albany on a Thurs nite; back-to-back rehearsals with the Reverse/The Secret History somewhere in Queens, NY. Sitting outside the building alone smoking asking myself "how did I land outside this random building in queens?" Tod and I having drinks in Williamsburg with Lisa and then at the 4th Ave Pub near his apt. Brunch at the Hope and Anchor, looking at the Queen Mary docked in Red Hook, a crazy tour through the Fairway super store. Mitch Easter being cranky with his drums. Tod almost refusing to play. Elena holding the lyric sheet for our cover of Frida's "There's Something Going On…" Getting the set list taped to my foot. Looking the aging indie pop poster child with my hair in pig tails while in my 30s. Casually talking pre-show to some lovely attendees from South America, where I confided that Tod and I rarely rehearse and just cram before a show, only to find our conversation lovingly reported in a webzine a week later. After waiting on-line several times to get to the coveted roof garden for drinks and mingling, Tod, Johnny and I all petered out at 2am and made our way back to b'lyn.

2. Girls with Glasses Spex-travaganza!, Bluestockings Bookstore, March 30 2007
This was a delightful event arranged by my good friend Marissa Walsh, in honor of the release of her book entitled Girl with Glasses: My Optic History (Simon Spotlight Entertainment, 2006). I played a few songs, including a special request by Marissa for "Yr Version of Cool" (a Mad Planets song from back in the day), which she listed as the Girl with Glasses "anthem" in her book. (It contains the lyric, "Girls with Glasses Rule the Bar/Strike their matches on a moving car…"). There were three other readers who were funny, sassy smart ladies, esp. the hipster haiku. I felt honored to be invited to play my guitar and my songs the legendary radical and feminist bookstore, and loved that so many friends came out.

3. The Annex, January 2007 with the Shondes
This was a weird show. It was January, it was cold, Jason and I drove down from Albany and back in the same day, taking turns staying awake on the NYS Thruway. I remember having dinner with Elena before hand, telling her I was not in the mood to play. Tod and I had practiced the week before or so, when I was on LI for a family event. But then we got up there, and it started and it was all worth it. Played with a bunch of cool, YOUNGINS, esp. the fabulous and energetic Shondes and the Changing Modes, who were new wavish and disco-ish at the same time. I admit, I envied their youth, and their lack of inhibition. They were all so brash and confident. After all these years, I am still the shy girl with a guitar.


4. Million Poems Show, College of Saint Rose, October 2006
This was SO MUCH fun. Poet and editor Dan Nester invited me to be the musical guest on this faux-talk show and it really was a trip. I played two songs, then was invited over to "the couch" to be interviewed, Letterman style! The other guest was Janice Erlbaum, who read from her book Girl Bomb, and Jason Spiro was the one-man house band, wearing a fake mustache and trading banter with host Jordan Davis. At the end, we were all "on the couch" and were asked to spontaneously compose poems based on words suggested by the audience members. I think mine involved a penguin. I actually signed an autograph. To top it off, it all took place in a college performance hall in a church!

5. Capital District Federation of Ideas, September 2006, w/poets Rebecca Woolf and Bernadette Mayer
Another literary/music event, this time at the CDFI, a converted storefront performance space around the corner from my house. Featured readers were poets Bernadette Mayer and Rebecca Woolf. I was invited to play a few songs between readers, and it was a delight to join Rebecca Woolf's set to perform "Moments too Late" which is a Reverse song that I wrote and then adapted her poem, "bell ringer for weather" for the lyrics. She read the poem, then I played the song, and we had a moment—none too late—of compare and contrast!

6. Valentine's, Albany July 2007 with Chris Brokaw and Poem Rocket
Tod and Johnny make their second trip to Albany, getting a little less lost this time, but still taking much longer than my the ellusice "3hrs door to door." (Okay, only once did I make it down to NYC this fast, and that was as a passenger on a runaway Chinatown bus.) This was a fun summer show. Mike Peters and Sandra Gardner, who live in Albany and comprise Poem Rocket, performed a beautiful almost-unplugged set. We all huddled close, as Valentine's had unfortunately booked a death metal band upstairs. But they were true indie pros, never flinching and delivering their moody, dark and lovely songs with intensity and commitment. Jason opened the show with a solo set of American classics and some orginals, like his wonderful "Cats" which has the line "Hey, you're my cats and I' home so lets celebrate!" I don't remember all that much about our set, 'cept that I was wearing higher-healed sandals than I normally would not and did not fall off the stage. Chris Brokaw, formerly of CODEINE and COME, was simply amazing. He played a set of intricate acoustic guitar songs with some foot percussion that reminded me of the lushness of Elliot Smith. Afterwards, we all sat in my backyard drinking beers in the summer night, discovering where our paths had crossed before, enjoying the fleeting company of not quite strangers.

7. The Reverse Record Release Party, June 20, 2007 with Dan Nester, Aidan Thompson

The albums arrived. Here it was; here they were. This show took place on THE LONGEST DAY OF THE YEAR: JUNE 20, 2006. The album title continues to grow in significance for me. A case of gravitation towards an idea, a concept, an image: first, of Ray Bradbury's Story "All Summer in a Day"; then morphing into a title that billowed with the start of summer and also its inevitable decline. When I've googled the title, I get hits from around the world, people marking their location and time in tandem with the sun and the planets. The day comprises a sense of teetering, of pivoting on descent, at the crest of the wave or the roller coaster, of time standing still, for a second.

Many friends chipped in to make this a success. Jenn was my merch gal, wo-manning the table with her girlfriend Dawn, not letting anyone leave empty handed. Eric MC'd, and I had party favors and trinkets for everyone. Dan Nester read many an awesome poem, including his tributes to rock band Queen and his diss on Mike Love of the Beach Boys. Aidan read her lovely labyrinthine poems. I did Tai Chi in private to prep to play, and Tod and I rocked Albany something fierce!

Relaxed afterwards in Eric's backyard, sipping drinks on a big swing.

8. North Six, Brooklyn, June 2006 with Shondes, My Teenage Stride
Tod and I made our great return to the stage, with special guests Ms. Andrea Vaughn on background vox and Kurt Brondo on keys. Loved playing this show. We used the "triangulation formation" on stage suggested by Elena, so that Tod and I can kinda face each other and also the audience, allowing for some precocious inter-band eye contact as well as audience interaction. Yay, Brooklyn show in the summer time. The other bands rocked and there was indie lovin all around.
Thursday, April 19, 2007 

Current mood:  quixotic
The Reverse-The Longest Day of the Year
Review by Jill Dudones
http://feministreview.blogspot.com/2007/04/reverse-longest-day-of-year.html

It's as if The Cure went acoustic, frontrunning the band with the softest sounds of feminine chanteusery. The Reverse is a twosome composed of vocalistic guitarist Tara Emelye Needham and drummer Todd "Todbot" Karasick. Born in Long Island, The Reverse migrated to New York City, as talents tend to do. Unaffected, feet-shuffling wanderings best describe the tone and tunes of this debut album, making one reasons, perhaps, why it is entitled The Longest Day of the Year. Needham's voice is so delicate and gentle that the duo's well-scribed lyrics hide behind overpowering guitar and percussion attacks. "Moon shines down/Tambourine round/Little Dipper dives into Orion/Pointing our way to the horizon," Needham mouths cutely, yet inaudibly.

I elect this album suitable for rainy-day background music and after the break-up or just before the make-up.
Tuesday, January 23, 2007 

Current mood:  bouncy
The Reverse sends a shout out to:

1.  WRCU 90.1, Colgate Univerisity radion station (http://wrcu.colgate.edu/) for featuring our album  _The Longest Day of the Year_ as a "Top Pick" this winter, in the fine company of Tom Waits and more!

2. Indie radio and promo outfit "Church of Girl" (http://www.churchofgirl.com/stars.php?page=/stars/thereverse) for selecting The Reverse as Radio Stars for January 2007!

3.  All the great bands and friends who came down to THE ANNEX in NYC this past Sunday: Changing Modes, Shondes, Dirty Excuse, Elena, Gil, Brenna, Felix, Marissa, Matt, Vika and Jim, Michael, Dave and Jen, the one and only Hillary Johnson and more....!!!!
Saturday, December 16, 2006 

Current mood:  complacent
This rad Seattle magazine www.threeimaginarygirls.com reviews the Reverse album as part of a horoscope for the month of December! All you lucky Leos, the Reverse is in the stars....Read on below. (Other signs check out the site at http://www.threeimaginarygirls.com/astropop06dec.asp).

Leo (July 23 - August 22)

The Longest Day of the Year is the debut full-length from Los Angeles-based band The Reverse (bloggers note: sadly, we do not live in LA. Our label is there, though! I, on the other hand am keeping it real in Albany, and Todd in Brooklyn..). True to its title it will warm up dear Leo, whose vivacious personality often tires from the gloom of these short winter days. Vocalist and guitarist Tara Emelye Needham and drummer Todd Karasick are just the kind of friends Leo loves to have around on chilling weeks. Like the Cocteau Twins, the duo claim a "telepathic connection" that enables them to take frosty existential heartache and 'reverse' it with seductive vocals and intricate art-pop hooks. Through ten literate slivers of creative adult rock, "Tell Your Mother" that good things are to be had after just a few more weeks of winter, Leo.
Friday, December 01, 2006 

Current mood:  grateful
Now I know why they call them laptops...because they fit on your lap, and you can type while you are sitting on the couch drinking coffee with one leg tucked under your tush and the other resting on the coffee table.

If you hadn't guessed, I got my first laptop, a macbook, and I feel liberated from my desk. Are these things waterproof? Do they go in the tub? Probably not, but I am tempted. Really, its enough that I can prowl around apartmenttherapy.com while in my bed! I know I am way behind the times here, but let me just say: great invention!

It came with this program Garage Band, which I look forward to fooling around with. All I can gather so far is that you can program in the time signature and other elements and away it goes. Maybe I'll post some of my creations here.
Thursday, October 19, 2006 
Hi all,

Our debut album, The Longest Day of the Year, is making its way into the world! You can get a copy at the following fine venues:

http://cdbaby.com/cd/thereverse

www.heartcorerecords.net

Its also on amazon and iTunes (or will be soon...)

xoxo Tara Emelye
Thursday, September 28, 2006 
As some of you may know, I already have a contested relationship with Starbucks (see my article on the company at
http://www.riffrag.org/contents.html).  Today I went to the deli on-campus at the Univeristy at Albany where I work and study, which exclusively sells Starbucks coffee since last year, only to find that they had phased out the 12oz cup.  I looked at both paper cup stations, and there were just vertical stacks of 16oz cups, which cost 30 cents more than the now-obsolete 12oz cups.  I asked a chartwells employee (chartwells is the all-purpose food service/management  company at UAlbany) about it:
Me:  "Did you run out of 12oz cups?"
Chartwells:  shakes her head and smiles knowingly and sympathetically
Me:  "There are none at all, ever again."
CW:  I don't speak English.  But no more.  Only big cups.
Me:  "That's weird"

I read recently that Starbucks upped its prices.  Thats just mega-bucks.  And this is a sneaky way to do it.  No more 12oz cups...I think I would rather pay more for less coffee than be forced to buy a cup size against my will.  I know I can only fill it as far as I want, so they are getting the money one way or another....

Okay, back to work...any thoughts on this....????

xoxo Tara Emelye
Saturday, September 09, 2006 
Hello to any and everyone finding their way to my second blog post!

This is a test, because I just tried to upload new show info, and got an error message, so I don't want to type my fingers and heart out and then have it all rejected by the cyber world.
Saturday, July 01, 2006 
Thanks to everyone who helped out with, attended, and/or danced at our recent shows at North Six in Brooklyn and Valentine's in Albany. The cd is done and we got some advanced copies in time for the Albany show, which took place on June 21, the summer solstice, i.e. "the longest day of the year", which incidentally is the title of our debut album!

The album will be officially released this fall and available on-line, in stores, etc. If you are totally jonesing for a copy or want a review copy, e-mail me! Otherwise, check back for updates about a release party in NYC.

It was awesome having Todd in Albany for the show. He got to experience the semi-urban, slowed-down pace of my adopted home town. We hung out at a small shin dig in a friend's backyard after the show, monopolizing the porch swing, sipping beers. Later, we had some less than stellar food at a local eatery that made up for it with atmosphere and patience. (Our party was a little rowdy). Willa the cat kept him company at night.

I never thought I would be a blogger, but I am going to try it out. Talk soon, xo Tara