Check back soon for our upcoming profile in Long Island Pulse!
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Good Times "Demolition" column, February 5-18, 2008 feature on The Dan Sheehan Conspiracy w/cover photo Who: Dan Sheehan is an area rock guitarist, songwriter, and singer who has performed with his band at many local venues, including The Zebra Club in Copiague and The End Zone in Whitestone, and has opened for Randy Jackson and Erocktica. This, his first self-titled CD, was recently released, and the CD release party was at The Parkside Lounge in New York City. He also has performed with the rock group Banter. What: The album is guitar-driven rock with a touch of pop -- and a surprising political bent on such tracks as opener "The Valley" and "Collateral Damage." Other musicians on the disc include Spencer Cobrin and Roi Star on drums, as Sheehan performs on the rest of the instruments himself. The disc was recorded at several venues in New York and New Jersey. This disc was recently featured on WBAB and on the Live365.com music website. At live shows, The Dan Sheehan Conspiracy consists of Sheehan, Bobby King Baby and bassist Michael Lynch. Availability: CDBaby.com, iTunes and most other mp3 online stores, Playgroundz.net, or by utilizing the links on the artist's website. To Learn More About The Band: Log on to the band's website at dansheehan.net. The group will perform at a benefit for cystic fibrosis with Race Odyssey and other acts at Molly Bloom's II in Amityville on February 2.
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Good Times January 22- Feb. 4, 2008 Dan Sheehan: A New Album Local act The Dan Sheehan Conspiracy recently performed at The Zebra Club in Copiague and The End Zone in Whitestone, opening for Randy Jackson and Erocktica. Their new self-titled CD was recently released, and is now available at CDBaby.com and other outlets. The band recently performed at a well-attended CD release party at the Parkside Lounge in New York City. Next up for the band is an appearnce at The Courthouse in Massapequa Park on Saturday, January 26. For more information, log on to dansheehan.net |
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METRONOME, July 2002 blurb about Urban Pastures CD This hard rock quartet takes simple progressions and pumps them up with muscle on their debut CD, Urban Pastures. Loud and in-your-face, Banter's energy and enthusiasm are well chronicled on anthems like "Open Wide," "Lowered" and "Farewell." |
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Metronome, June 2002 Band profile w/photo BANTER has been rocking the Northeastern
United States with a vengeance since 1996, when founding members Dan Sheehan
and Joe Smith met and began laying down the foundation of what has been,
by Boston standards, an enduring rock legacy. In a college town where
bands come and go, BANTER has managed to stay on top of the rock scene
while musical fads have risen and fallen. |
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THE NOISE, September 1999 BANTER wins second "song of the month" honors! Review of our songs on
the MONDRIAN compilation disc ("Farewell") is the keeper--a reverb-fest in the opening bars turns into an introspective bass and cymbal thing, and the song's quasi-mocking mawkishness suits it well--it sounds, quite unintentionally, perhaps, like a spot-on parody of late-period Zombies ca. Odyssey and Oracle. Our Song of the Month for August. (4 stars out of 5) NOTE: "Farewell" went on to be #6 on the Audiodoodah top 20 songs of 1999. |
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Metronome,, February 1998 Band profile w/photo Out of the harsh winter of 1995-1996 came the band known as BANTER. Originally named Rogues Gallery, they changed their name to Banter due to an incidence that involved members of a heavy metal band throwing chairs at Dan while on stage, claiming to have chosen the name first. Since then, the band has quickly established themselves in the Boston music scene and released a new CD featuring a slew of new songs as well as many old favorites. Filled with vigorous spirit, their new CD is sure to delight longtime BANTER fans as well as new ones as the band continues to play and record throughout the Bay State and beyond. |
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THE NOISE, December 1997 review of "Springtime
in February" single Ex-Rogues' Gallery, Banter produces a sound that says "All the squares go home." Through the A-side may well owe something to "Needles and Pins" by the Searchers (and perhaps "Makes No Sense At All" by Husker Du), it's one of the finer songs to come our way in quite a spell. The surly vocals are belligerent yet strangely affectionate. This tune should be the theme song of Central Square, de facto capital of the Boston music scene now that The Rat has bitten the dust for good. Even when the band turns in a less than stellar song, as on the B-side, there's still something intriguing about the effort which rewards repeated listenings--in this case, it's the angular guitar riff, as continually frustrated of final resolution as the lyric theme of the song itself. "Springtime in February" is my pick for song of the month. (4 1/2 stars out of 5). NOTE: "Springtime in Februaryl" went on to be #12 on the Audiodoodah top 20 songs of 1997. |
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THE NOISE, November 1996 review of Side One e.p. Considering the name, we were anticipating with utter dread some sort of shlock-gore screamfest, in which quasi-literate yobbos pester us with nerve-softening drivel for hell-and-a-day. Picture, then, our delight when, instead, we were soothed by five tracks torn fresh from the unmixed and unmastered tracks of a forthcoming EP. Manic, yes, but with the same sort of manic intensity as local avatars of yore such as the pre-drunken-Blues Neats and Native Tongue, and all with a quietly depressive quality to attenuate the manic edge. Best of show: the aptly named "Metaphysics," with its soi-disant garage feel and inescapably heartful edge, practically up there with "Live for Today" by The Rascals. (A song they play on WODS a lot. The people who like this song and follow this philosophy are, in fact, just the kind of go-nowhere working stiffs that WODS longs to cater to). Send us more like this. (4 stars out of 5) |