For Immediate Release
Local Music Publisher Signs International Artist and Schenectady Native Singer-Songwriter to Roster.
Delmar, NY - 2.25.10 - Indian Ledge Records is pleased to announce that Bernie Walters, Publishing Manager of The Music Publishing Company has secured two new co-publishing deals. The first exciting opportunity is with local singer-songwriter Danielle Gaudin. Gaudin’s most recent success seemingly arose from thin air when she became the winner of the “Capital Region’s Got Talent” competition at the Revolution Hall in Troy, NY. The fall 2009 contest allowed Gaudin a chance to release two albums in a mere matter of weeks in November and December of 2009. Her first and second albums respectively titled “You Started It” and “Songbird” are great lyrical platforms to build from. Gaudin wants to be a songwriter more than a performer and TMPC will be working with her in efforts to seek film and TV licensing deals and to arrange collaborations with other writers and artists.
Initially Gaudin recorded tracks for her website, which allowed MTV to grab a few songs for the reality series "The Hills," and two songs for Showtime's "Secret Diaries of a Call Girl." Gaudin’s songs are inspired from the stories of others. She was approached by Tom O’Claire to write a song about his son who had committed suicide in 2001. Gaudin plans to release the single called “Battles from Within” to raise money for a suicide prevention charity. Gaudin will donate 50% of the songs proceeds to the charity.
Jack Harrison, hailing from the north side of Dublin is a yoga instructor, heritage consultant, lecturer, exhibition designer, and songwriter who concocts lyrics that depict spiritual and ancient themes. Harrison is the first international artist to grace our publishing roster. He brings two albums to the table: “Sailing With Dragons” and “Wind Across the Sea”. The first collection of songs “Sailing with Dragons” was recorded live in Kinvara, Co Galway. Many themes are covered by mostly an Irish Heritage. Harrison’s first recording of yoga music “Wind Across the Sea” had been performed for five years before he was sponsored by Yoga Thailand to bring his band and a sound engineer to go to Koh Samui, Thailand to record it live.
Jack Harrison creates as a “part time” songwriter, yet his music is completely tied to his work in historical contexts. Harrison claims the music became a natural progression of his research and work… therefore each process informs the other to create a fully integrated and completely realized piece of art.
Jack Harrison has worked with Liam Clancy and has appeared with Liam on the Late Late Show, the Point Theatre and the National Concert Hall as well as singing with the Galway Baroque Singers and Cois Cladaigh choirs in Galway, and with vocal group The Press Gang at festivals in Ireland, France, Poland and the US. TMPC will be working with Harrison to place and license his work in US film and TV.
The recent additions to Indian Ledge Records publishing arm The Music Publishing Company will continue to be administered by the Criterion Music Corp. one of the few truly independent music publishers still standing.
You can check out the individual artist webpages here:
http://indianledgerecords.com/publishing
http://www.daniellemariegaudin.com/
Contact: Bernie Walters
518-779-3511
Bernie.Walters@IndianLedgeRecords.com
On February 27th 2010 T-Bone Wolk suffered a heart attack. T-Bone, you will be dearly missed. I am at a total loss for words here.

Capital Region bands find hope in collectives as the recording industry changes
By TOM KEYSER, Staff writer
First published in print: Sunday, February 21, 2010
When Sgt Dunbar & the Hobo Banned, the Albany folk-rock group, received an invitation to play the prestigious South by Southwest (SXSW) music festival last year in Austin, Texas, it came via the Internet. A national record company had no hand in securing the invitation, booking the engagement or getting the band to the show.
Alex Muro, the manager of Sgt Dunbar, had posted a comment on an online music forum. The comment contained a link to the band's Web site. A representative from SXSW noticed the comment, clicked on the link, listened for free to the band's music and, duly impressed, sent Muro an e-mail inviting the band to play.
That's how things happen in the music business these days. As major record companies have consolidated and downsized, and as technology and the Internet have allowed musicians to record at home and distribute their own songs, the big-business model has yielded to smaller, regional companies and given opportunities to previously overlooked musicians.
Collectives have sprung up to help like-minded artists record and sell music on iTunes, eMusic and Amazon. Musicians still long for the financial rewards that signing with a major label can provide, but the action has shifted to the grass-roots level.
"For a long time, getting a major-label deal seemed like the only way you could connect meaningfully with large numbers of people," said Paul C. Rapp, a lawyer in Housatonic, Mass., who specializes in art-and-entertainment matters and represents musicians and record companies in the Capital Region. "The Internet and digital technology changed all that.
"Now, these collectives are putting out a remarkable amount of music, and it's all very high quality. Add to that the dozens of bands who are putting out their own stuff, and you have more good music being written, recorded and released at a pace that the region has never seen before."
It's hard to pin down the exact number of record companies and collectives in the Capital Region, but those involved identify about a dozen. Some operate out of homes. Others fall dormant for long periods. They range from Equal Vision Records in Albany and Sundazed Music in Coxsackie -- companies with national profiles -- to homegrown operations that release a handful of records a year.
Sgt Dunbar & the Hobo Banned is part of the collective known as the B3nson Recording Co. The name comes from the house at 3 Benson St., where, starting in 2005, a group of musicians lived while attending the University at Albany.
They played music together and formed bands that shared musicians and recording equipment. In 2006, they formed B3nson, and the next year they released their first CDs. Now B3nson represents about 40 musicians who play in seven primary bands and nearly 30 side projects. Its 25th release comes out Friday. Most bands print a few hundred CDs and consider it a success if they sell enough to cover manufacturing costs, Muro said.
"We have enough equipment and knowledge that we can record an album from scratch," he said. "And we can help whoever is putting the album together do the packaging and all that. We're certainly not a traditional record label. It's more that everybody sort of helps promote everybody else's stuff."
The musicians hold meetings every other Thursday and vote on financial matters. They work or go to school; no one makes a living from music. But last year, while playing at SXSW, Sgt Dunbar piqued the interest of National Public Radio and was featured on its "All Things Considered" show.
"We sold a couple of thousand songs on the Internet last year, which is not paying anybody's rent, but it helps keep the band moving forward," Muro said. "And half of those we sold on the day of the radio show and the day afterward."
The most popular site for selling music is iTunes -- and it's surprisingly reasonable to get involved. It costs from $30 to $60 to put an album on iTunes, and the site allows customers to download most songs for 99 cents and most albums for $9.99. The bands receive 77 percent of that.
"It's a great cut," Muro said. "For a really low upfront cost, bands that previously would not have had access to a national market suddenly have access to everybody in the United States."
Three other small companies formed in the Capital Region in 2006, the same year B3nson did, and for the same reason.
"We started it sort of as an umbrella to group together some of the music we were really excited about at the time," said Matthew Loiacono, who started Collar City Records with bandmates in The Kamikaze Hearts and now runs it out of his home in Ballston Lake. "We invited some of our friends. We figured that the combined power of all of our albums together would be stronger than if we were just putting out our own albums."
Nick Cosimano started Indian Ledge Records primarily to showcase his friends' band, Alta Mira. He matched the band with a production team that included two Grammy winners, and Alta Mira's self-titled CD, recorded in a studio near Boston, came out late last year. It has garnered rave reviews.
Nick Reinert, Indian Ledge's creative director, said the company hopes to sell 40,000 albums at the online sites, the Indian Ledge Web site store and Alta Mira's concerts. That's ambitious, he said, but it's a long-range goal.
No matter how fun it is making music with friends, musicians still want to make it big. And that, in most cases, still means signing with a national label. The two-member Phantogram, which started on the Saratoga Springs' Sub-Bombin Records, one of the companies that started four years ago, has come closest to that.
The duo of Sarah Barthel and Josh Carter signed in 2008 with the national indie label Barsuk Records, based in Seattle. Barsuk executives discovered Phantogram's music on the Internet. Barsuk released the band's first CD earlier this month and now has Barthel and Carter on a national tour.
"The cooperatives look for something like what happened to Phantogram to happen to one of their acts with the belief that the high water will lift all the boats," said Rapp, the entertainment lawyer who includes Phantogram among his clients. "The hope is that once somebody out of the cooperative gets signed, and is successful, that people will look back at the cooperative as the breeding grounds and look for more of the same.
"Phantogram is the perfect example of how it can happen. You start out on one of these local cooperatives, and your music starts circulating around the Internet, and people find it."
Tom Keyser can be reached at 454-5448 or by e-mail at tkeyser@timesunion.com.
Music makers
Here is where you can go online to find music by Capital Region companies mentioned in this article:
Equal Vision Records: http://www.equalvision.com
Sundazed Music: http://www.sundazed.com
B3nson Recording Co.: http://b3nson.net
Collar City Records: http://www.collarcityrecords.com
Indian Ledge Records: http://www.indianledgerecords.com
Sub-Bombin Records: http://www.sub-bombin.com
Unfortunately it appears the 3D video experiment from iPix has not gone well, and the video got corrupted from the stage vibrations. We were all excited to potentially have some wiked cool video of the Alta Mira release show.. Sorry!

First published in print: Friday, January 15, 2010
CAPITAL REGION MUSIC
Alta Mira, "Alta Mira" (Indian Ledge)
You can lose yourself on the journey through this intriguing CD, the first full-length album by one of the Capital Region's most highly acclaimed bands. It's imaginative, expertly produced and a showcase for the strong, expressive vocals of Joe Michon-Huneau.
It's not always easy, however. Promotional material from Indian Ledge Records in Delmar describes the songs as "poetic, intricate, textured, time shifting, art rock" that "challenge the listener's ears, emotions and expectations."
Original Link http://www.inyourspeakers.com/content/alta-mira-alta-mira

Albany, NY based Alta Mira's eponymous debut has been over two years in the making and gives off every impression of being a labor of love. The album flows more smoothly than expected, given the wide range of moods it covers. The time and effort put into this album shows not just in the well put together package of songs, but also in the comfort the band clearly feels with the material. There is a confidence in these songs not usually found on a debut album.
According to the band, the environment of Barefoot Studios, where the album was recorded, was highly influential on the finished product. Barefoot Studios is a large studio space housed in a former mental hospital. Bassist August Sagehorn likened the place to Hell in an interview with the Albany Daily Gazette. But the dark mood that atmosphere must have inspired does not completely permeate the album. It is difficult to pin down a specific emotional tone for the album as a whole; indeed it is sometimes difficult to pin down the emotional tone of individual tracks. Many of the songs go through several tempo changes while vocalist Joe Michon-Huneau effortlessly brings the audience along for the ride.
Alta Mira has already been compared to a multitude of different musical acts, ranging from Radiohead to the Beatles. All of these influences are clear on the album, and with so many influences pulling the band in so many directions, it would be tempting to classify Alta Mira as an album with too many personalities. But that would not be fair. The band's influences are clearly stamped on their sound, but they have done something unique with all of it, and created something new.
While Michon-Huneau's vocals are quite flashy and seem to overshadow much of the album, a close listen shows Sagehorn's bass to be more of a driving force. Sagehorn steers the songs seamlessly into one another, allowing Michon-Huneau to dazzle us with his not inconsiderable talent. Nowhere is this dynamic more apparent than in “Sinker/Or” with Sagehorn's modest, yet powerful instrument gently steering the song.
In fact, August Sagehorn dominates the album enough that it is sometimes to the detriment of his brother, Hunter, the band’s lead guitarist. The only tracks of the album in which Hunter manages to outshine his brother is the excellent “Din & Drone” and “Harder They Fall” which manage to feature the guitar playing above the competing efforts of singer and bassist. Underneath the overpowering talents of Michon-Huneau and his brother August, Hunter Sagehorn does display a promising ability, and one hopes that further releases from this band will allow him greater opportunity to shine. But on this disc, he is underwhelming, or at least seems that way in comparison to his bandmates.
Drummer Tommy Krebs, while also playing second to Sagehorn's bass and the vocals, holds his own. Unfortunately, he never has a moment to truly shine, though he comes close in the prog-rock style “Harder They Fall,” a track that brings the Mars Volta to mind. Krebs opens the track with some deft work, though it quickly takes a backseat to the Sagehorn brothers’ intricate playing.
Posted on December 31st, 2009 (2:27 pm) by Andrea Martin
Original Link: http://www.nippertown.com/2009/12/04/cd-alta-miras-alta-mira (Indian Ledge Records, 2009) We first heard Alta Mira three years ago, when they were sharing the stage with the haunting Lisa Germano at Valentine’s Music Hall. We immediately became fans. A year later, the young quartet released their debut disc on Indian Ledge Records. The EP “Fables and Fabrications” caught a lot of ears and garnered the band lots of great press. Now they’re finally unleashing their first full-length album. It’s about time. And it’s worth the wait. Alta Mira’s sound is difficult to pin down. It’s certainly not any kind of straight-forward rock formula. It’s complex, intoxicating. This is challenging stuff. Joe Michon-Huneau’s passionate, open-hearted vocals immediately leap to front-and-center, while drummer Tommy Krebs and brothers Hunter and August Sagehorn (on bass and guitar, respectively) mold the songs with intricate, imaginative arrangements like seasoned sonic sculptors. Tempos and moods shift 180-degrees in a heartbeat. And back again. Is it art-rock anchored in funk? It shimmers as much as it shakes. It’s delicate, yet dynamic. It’s purposefully disorienting. There’s genuine drama here. Take, for example, “The End of My,” which sounds something like Jeff Buckley singing an incredibly contagious Marshall Crenshaw song backed by the Police’s Andy Summer. And that’s followed by the compelling, yet understated instrumental “Interlude.” The band’s sound has drawn comparisons to such diverse influences as Radiohead, Incubus, the Beatles, Talking Heads, Verve Pipe, XTC, Jerry Cantrell, the Mars Volta, Tool, the Sea and Cake. They’re all right. And all wrong. Alta Mira’s music unfolds at its own pace to reveal its altogether unique inner beauty. Alta Mira celebrates the release of their self-titled album debut at Revolution Hall in Troy on Saturday (December 5). They’re calling it “The Alta Mira CD Release Experiment,” and the festivities includes art installations, interactive 360-degree video and music by Alta Mira, Railbird, Matthew Loiacono and Matt Durfee. Doors open at 7pm. Admission is $10, which includes a copy of the new CD.
WEXT-Exit 97.7 November CD Spotlight: Alta Mira
Local 518 band Alta Mira's self-titled debut took nearly two years in and out of Barefoot Studios to record, but the wait was worth it. The result is an album full of poetic, intricate, textured and time-shifting art rock. The complete album package will be available to the public on December 5 at the album release party at Revolution Hall in Troy, NY but you can secure your copy now when you support the eclectic music mix of Exit 97.7 - WEXT.
Alta Mira It’s been two long years since Metroland named Alta Mira the region’s Best New Band, and so there’d been some speculation that the category might carry a curse similar to that of being featured on the cover. [Ed.—We have determined the curse to be a myth.] As it turns out, the quartet had simply been cloistered away at Barefoot Studios in Massachusetts honing material for this, their full-length debut, the inaugural record for Albany upstart label Indian Ledge Records. Thankfully, all that attention to detail has paid off, as Alta Mira is a powerfully mature offering that doesn’t shy away from either art-rock grandeur or radio viability. Vocalist Joe D. Michon-Huneau doesn’t hesitate to display all that his sterling pipes can do, with a post-emo penchant for musical theatrics that ranges from Jeff Buckley confessional to Cedric Bixler-Zavala virtuosic. But as much as Michon-Huneau dominates the disc, brothers Hunter and August Sagehorn (guitar and bass, respectively) shape it. Standout tracks like “Sinker/Or,” with its Sea and Cake lilt, and “Slumberjack,” built on a bed of fuzz bass, prove that the band are hiding some serious chops behind their economic songcraft. Like a post-Radiohead Andy Summers, Hunter prefers to play delicate time-signature games with his brother and drummer Tommy Krebs rather than take a solo, and “Harder They Fall” succumbs to outward because-we-can prog-rock. Dig the hazy “Interlude” for what the instrumental trio can do by their lonesome. Graced with the kind of masterly production that used to be reserved for major-label acts, this is a serious disc from a band with serious aspirations. More than shake a curse, this one should set Alta Mira up for loftier superlatives. —Josh Potter