The Big Big show w/ Big Something & Big Daddy Love
Thu, June 21, 2012
Doors: 8:30 pm / Show: 9:00 pm
Local 506
Chapel Hill, NC
$7.00
Tickets
This event is all ages
IMPORTANT: In accordance with NC Law, membership is required to attend shows at Local 506. For more info, click here
http://www.local506.com/event/126801/Big Something

BIG Something is an alternative rock group with a BIG groove. A tight six-piece ensemble that brings arena sized grooves to every stage they play. This is funk, fit for the future, featuring crystalline synths, wailing saxes, and guitars that shred established musical boundaries. Their debut album "Stories from the Middle of Nowhere" was recorded in Raleigh, NC with Grammy-nominated producer John Custer and was named the Home Grown Music Network's Best Studio Album of 2010. Each song is something special: catchy and charming, layered and soulful, with colorful characters that embody the best and worst in us all. One listen will lead to many and you'll realize you've discovered that BIG Something. Winners of the Home Grown Music Network's 2010 "New Band of the Year" award.
In December 2011 BIG Something released "Mad Science: Live at the Costume Ball", a new live recording captured in front of 600+ fans on 10.29.2011 at the Lincoln Theatre in Raleigh. Stream this album and the award winning "Stories From the Middle of Nowhere" free at www.BigSomething.net
"Comparing them to Rush, Widespread Panic, or Bruce Springsteen is lofty praise. For a band called Big Something, they surely live up to their name." – PopBlend
"It's not a good band, it's a great band!" – Artie Kornfeld (co-founder of Woodstock '69, former VP Capitol Records)
In December 2011 BIG Something released "Mad Science: Live at the Costume Ball", a new live recording captured in front of 600+ fans on 10.29.2011 at the Lincoln Theatre in Raleigh. Stream this album and the award winning "Stories From the Middle of Nowhere" free at www.BigSomething.net
"Comparing them to Rush, Widespread Panic, or Bruce Springsteen is lofty praise. For a band called Big Something, they surely live up to their name." – PopBlend
"It's not a good band, it's a great band!" – Artie Kornfeld (co-founder of Woodstock '69, former VP Capitol Records)
Big Daddy Love

Big Daddy Love's multiple performances at 2011's Floyd Festival made it clear that this is likely the most important new band to watch in the East Coast roots rock and Americana community. Having only been together since the Summer of 2009, Big Daddy Love-- founded by high school friends from the rural hill country of Sparta, NC-- was just playing a handful of North Carolina markets when they made their first trip to Floyd in 2010, where they won the prestigious "Under The Radar" contest for the best new artist at the large, Virginia festival. The fresh, vital sound and energized performance of this new band simply blew people away, and with the fan-voted award under their belts, Big Daddy Love returned home and began to build their grass roots following in earnest.
Essentially organic in both disposition and composition, Big Daddy Love is a five-piece band with a unique and natural blend of rock, roots and grass that they call 'Appalachian Rock.' Above the mix, the lead vocals and acoustic guitar accompaniment of their principal songwriter, Daniel Justin Smith, command the listener's attention and call for the harmonies that arise in response. Twin leads of Stratocaster riffs and soaring Allman-esque slide guitar on the one hand, and electric and acoustic 5-string Scruggs / Fleck style banjo on the other-- like a typical Southern rock line-up, just replacing the second guitar with the banjo-- punctuate and emphasize what Smith delivers. These contrasting voices are anchored by a rhythm section that is equally at home in a groove or driving the bus with country, swing, funk or straight ahead rock. Big Daddy Love's high-energy performances, fueled by this combination of fiery vocals, sweet-sugary harmonies and striking instrumental dynamics that range from bombastic assaults to soothing grooves, have garnered them a strong, passionate following throughout their home region. Live, with the lights on and the volume up, Big Daddy Love stretches the music out with top notch picking and ripping, delivering a stompin' good time rich with authentic Carolina soul. At the same time, the good-natured, yet thoughtful sincerity of the lyrical content, the authentic song-craft and the undeniable musicianship of the band-- as heard in live and studio recordings-- has resonated with audiences throughout the ether and generated demand beyond the markets where they currently perform.
With their upcoming release, Let It Grow (Little King Records, 2011), Big Daddy Love's signature Appalachian Rock sound is further refined in a collection of songs that seamlessly pick up where their 2010 debut To The Mountain left off. Reviews of To The Mountain were glowing, such as this one from Belgium (of all places): "…[if you are] a fan of The Allman Brothers Band or Drive-By Truckers, but you are open to bluegrass elements, then this CD really is a must." Closer to home, North Carolina music media staple Mountain Xpress said: "From start to finish, To The Mountain is a captivating album that alludes to a dynamic live show. If the musicians dabble in a variety of styles it's only because, well, they can. And certain elements— a tightly-coiled energy always threatening to explode within each song, a choice group of collaborators, flawless musicianship and Smith's compelling vocals— provide a palpable thread throughout." The record was picked up as a favorite spin by Americana and AAA radio stations throughout the region, including taste-maker WNCW in Spindale, NC. To The Mountain was a snapshot of a young band realizing the power of their vision, stretching the boundaries of their influences while celebrating their Appalachian roots. The follow-up, from a band that is now more seasoned-- both on the road and in their personal lives-- remains consistent in terms of its broad subject matter, its sincerity and its dynamic. This is good news for the fans. This is also good news for the roots music community, which is more-and-more represented over the last couple of years by bands from places far removed from the roots themselves, who have adopted a more cynical posture to the idiom. With their "on the sleeve," sincere sentiments and first rate musicianship, Big Daddy Love may well be the antidote to this erosion of the roots sound, despite being-- in many ways-- a blue collar rock band with Appalachian flavor.
Essentially organic in both disposition and composition, Big Daddy Love is a five-piece band with a unique and natural blend of rock, roots and grass that they call 'Appalachian Rock.' Above the mix, the lead vocals and acoustic guitar accompaniment of their principal songwriter, Daniel Justin Smith, command the listener's attention and call for the harmonies that arise in response. Twin leads of Stratocaster riffs and soaring Allman-esque slide guitar on the one hand, and electric and acoustic 5-string Scruggs / Fleck style banjo on the other-- like a typical Southern rock line-up, just replacing the second guitar with the banjo-- punctuate and emphasize what Smith delivers. These contrasting voices are anchored by a rhythm section that is equally at home in a groove or driving the bus with country, swing, funk or straight ahead rock. Big Daddy Love's high-energy performances, fueled by this combination of fiery vocals, sweet-sugary harmonies and striking instrumental dynamics that range from bombastic assaults to soothing grooves, have garnered them a strong, passionate following throughout their home region. Live, with the lights on and the volume up, Big Daddy Love stretches the music out with top notch picking and ripping, delivering a stompin' good time rich with authentic Carolina soul. At the same time, the good-natured, yet thoughtful sincerity of the lyrical content, the authentic song-craft and the undeniable musicianship of the band-- as heard in live and studio recordings-- has resonated with audiences throughout the ether and generated demand beyond the markets where they currently perform.
With their upcoming release, Let It Grow (Little King Records, 2011), Big Daddy Love's signature Appalachian Rock sound is further refined in a collection of songs that seamlessly pick up where their 2010 debut To The Mountain left off. Reviews of To The Mountain were glowing, such as this one from Belgium (of all places): "…[if you are] a fan of The Allman Brothers Band or Drive-By Truckers, but you are open to bluegrass elements, then this CD really is a must." Closer to home, North Carolina music media staple Mountain Xpress said: "From start to finish, To The Mountain is a captivating album that alludes to a dynamic live show. If the musicians dabble in a variety of styles it's only because, well, they can. And certain elements— a tightly-coiled energy always threatening to explode within each song, a choice group of collaborators, flawless musicianship and Smith's compelling vocals— provide a palpable thread throughout." The record was picked up as a favorite spin by Americana and AAA radio stations throughout the region, including taste-maker WNCW in Spindale, NC. To The Mountain was a snapshot of a young band realizing the power of their vision, stretching the boundaries of their influences while celebrating their Appalachian roots. The follow-up, from a band that is now more seasoned-- both on the road and in their personal lives-- remains consistent in terms of its broad subject matter, its sincerity and its dynamic. This is good news for the fans. This is also good news for the roots music community, which is more-and-more represented over the last couple of years by bands from places far removed from the roots themselves, who have adopted a more cynical posture to the idiom. With their "on the sleeve," sincere sentiments and first rate musicianship, Big Daddy Love may well be the antidote to this erosion of the roots sound, despite being-- in many ways-- a blue collar rock band with Appalachian flavor.