Kaylee Daugherty at California English
Oct 10
Jazz singer-songwriter Kaylee Daugherty is a former worship leader with roots in gospel and R&B. She has performed and recorded with local stars such as Irving Flores, Ed Kornhauser, and Mikan Zlatkovich. Her performing repertoire includes over 500 songs sung in five languages, in the styles of Jazz, Latin jazz, funk, and pop.
Mr. Tube & the Flying Objects at the Quartyard
Oct 11
Led by singer-guitarist Pall Jenkins, Mr. Tube & the Flying Objects specializes in soundtrack-y songs that seem to hail from the ‘60s or ‘70s, except filtered through an experimental R&B-flavored garage dub. According to the band, “These sounds carry on through the generations creating new astral planes like galactic poison floating in between the 68 planets.” Headlining the East Village event will be Washington post-hardcore band Unwound.
Oct 12 and Nov 15
Formed in 1998 by singers, songwriters, and multi-instrumentalists Armistead Burwell Smith IV (also known as Zach Smith) and Rob Crow, Pinback was among the most celebrated San Diego bands to find favor on national stages. For their two-night stand in Del Mar, they’ll be celebrating the 20th anniversary of their best-selling album Summer in Abaddon by performing the entire LP.
Oct 12
Founded in La Mesa, Chorduroy is fronted by Taylor Sandoval, who formerly worked at San Diego Surf School in Pacific Beach. Their recently released debut album is called Voice Of Reason, and they’re known for their energetic live shows and local-centric songs such as “I Hate Surfing PB.” Female-fronted four-piece Annie Taylor headlines, and the bill includes Sun Jelly.
Oct 14
Moondaddy is a dream pop quintet founded in 2020 by singer, songwriter, producer, and multi-instrumentalist Cara Potiker. Their recent Lightwave Lightwave EP was co-produced by Manuel Calderon (Animal Collective, Beach House) and mastered/cut from the tapes to a lacquer by Paul Gold (Grizzly Bear, Animal Collective). The show is headlined by Brooklyn NYC experimental pop band Psymon Spine.
Kaylee Daugherty at California English
Oct 10
Jazz singer-songwriter Kaylee Daugherty is a former worship leader with roots in gospel and R&B. She has performed and recorded with local stars such as Irving Flores, Ed Kornhauser, and Mikan Zlatkovich. Her performing repertoire includes over 500 songs sung in five languages, in the styles of Jazz, Latin jazz, funk, and pop.
Mr. Tube & the Flying Objects at the Quartyard
Oct 11
Led by singer-guitarist Pall Jenkins, Mr. Tube & the Flying Objects specializes in soundtrack-y songs that seem to hail from the ‘60s or ‘70s, except filtered through an experimental R&B-flavored garage dub. According to the band, “These sounds carry on through the generations creating new astral planes like galactic poison floating in between the 68 planets.” Headlining the East Village event will be Washington post-hardcore band Unwound.
Oct 12 and Nov 15
Formed in 1998 by singers, songwriters, and multi-instrumentalists Armistead Burwell Smith IV (also known as Zach Smith) and Rob Crow, Pinback was among the most celebrated San Diego bands to find favor on national stages. For their two-night stand in Del Mar, they’ll be celebrating the 20th anniversary of their best-selling album Summer in Abaddon by performing the entire LP.
Oct 12
Founded in La Mesa, Chorduroy is fronted by Taylor Sandoval, who formerly worked at San Diego Surf School in Pacific Beach. Their recently released debut album is called Voice Of Reason, and they’re known for their energetic live shows and local-centric songs such as “I Hate Surfing PB.” Female-fronted four-piece Annie Taylor headlines, and the bill includes Sun Jelly.
Oct 14
Moondaddy is a dream pop quintet founded in 2020 by singer, songwriter, producer, and multi-instrumentalist Cara Potiker. Their recent Lightwave Lightwave EP was co-produced by Manuel Calderon (Animal Collective, Beach House) and mastered/cut from the tapes to a lacquer by Paul Gold (Grizzly Bear, Animal Collective). The show is headlined by Brooklyn NYC experimental pop band Psymon Spine.
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