WARMfest Dispatch Day 2
Editor’s Note: This story was originally published on defunct, central Indiana arts website Sky Blue Window on August 31, 2014. Some content, style and formatting may differ from the original version.
Day two of WARMfest served as the coming-out party for Joyful Noise Recordings, an Indianapolis record label that has established itself as a bona fide titan in the indie rock world in recent years. From the slacker/garage rock trio Sleeping Bag to the absurdist lyricism of Why? and the circus-like headlining set from of Montreal, the label’s eclectic roster was in the spotlight on the main stage from start to finish on Saturday.
While JNR’s stage appeared to go off without a hitch to the WARMfest audience, it wasn’t without its share of behind-the-scenes logistical snafus. Around 9 p.m. Friday, label owner Karl Hofstetter was hosting a barbecue and marathon recording session at his house across the street from the festival when he learned that Half Japanese’s drummer Gilles Reider was barred entry into the country by U.S. customs agents upon his arrival at Detroit’s airport.
“We found out that he had flown from France, where he lives, into Detroit, and they had detained him because they thought it was suspicious because he was only here for two days,” Hofstetter says. “They searched through his phone and found emails relating to the fest, and he didn’t have a proper work visa. I get the feeling that a large contributing factor to him not being able to come was that he just couldn’t communicate with these people. If he was a native English speaker, he could’ve just said ‘Okay, let me pay the $300 fine, and let me go.’ Instead, they sent him back.”
In the 11th hour, longtime Half Japanese guitarist John Sluggett was forced to shuffle into the role of drummer. Ironically, Sluggett first met lead singer Jad Fair while filling in on drums at an impromptu gig in Florida around 1988.
While returning to this role might seem like an impossible task to a non-musician, Sluggett said it wasn’t too much of a stretch. Sluggett served as drummer in Moe Tucker’s band, former drummer of The Velvet Underground, after Fair introduced the pair in 1989 until recently. Plus, he knows these songs. “I’ve been playing with Jad for so long, about half the songs are riffs that I wrote on the guitar,” Sluggett says. “So, I know how they go.”
Rounding out the rest of Half Japanese’s lineup on Saturday was Mick Hobbs on guitar and Jason Willett on bass. Willett met Fair in his home base of Baltimore around the same time as Sluggett when Fair found himself bandless on the cusp of a European tour. “Jad and I became good friends down in Maryland and he said, ‘Come over to my house. I need to talk to you.’,” Willett says. “ He said ‘I have a month-and-a-half tour and no band. Will you, A: be in the band? and B: can you recruit?’” Willett agreed to both, teaching himself bass and 30 songs in the span of a month and recruited Hobbs via a chance long-distance phone call.
“I called up Mick Hobbs in London,” Willett says, “because I was listening to a bunch music – I was listening to Family Fodder, The Work, Officer, The Momes – all these amazing records coming out of England. I’m like, ‘I’m just gonna call that guy.’ I called him up, international information, and he was like ‘Hullo?’ … ‘Hi are you Mick Hobbs?’ … and he’s like, ‘Yes.’ … ‘Do you want to be in Half Japanese? … ‘Is this a joke?’” With the addition of Reider, the current Half Japanese lineup has been in place in some form ever since, excluding the occasional, decade-long hiatus.
Despite the missing members, Half Japanese’s set proved to be one of my favorites in a day filled with extraordinary performances. Fair played a custom-painted guitar that was literally coming apart at the hinges. It looked to be held together by the four capos clamped to the first fret. Fair’s lyrics are naïve and playful. In an epiphany of sorts, he disproved the long-held theory that nothing rhymes with the word “orange,” utilizing the perfectly placed compound “door hinge.” Brilliant.
The strength of Joyful Noise’s roster made it tough to pry myself from the main stage on Saturday. However, I finally managed to catch a glimpse of Sluggett served as drummer in Moe Tucker’s band, former drummer of The Velvet Underground, after Fair introduced the pair in 1989 until recently. Plus, he knows these songs. local super group, The Last IV, featuring Rusty Redenbacher (vocals), Vess Ruhtenberg (guitar), Devon Ashley (drums) and Tufty Clough (bass). Redenbacher is as dynamic a front man as any act could hope for, gyrating, howling and coercing the crowd into a frenzy. The group’s set leaned heavily on covers, but their impeccable taste left no room for complaint in the audience with a diverse set list featuring everything from The Stooges to LCD Soundsystem.
Another noteworthy, non-JNR performance featured a trio of heavy hitters from Indy’s hip-hop scene. Freddie Bunz, Grey Granite and Sirius Blvck rocked a seamless set under the shade of WARMfest’s Heron stage. The trio was sharp, and the chops earned on their recent Ghost Gun Summer Vacation Tour was evident throughout. All-in-all, Saturday was everything I had hoped for and more — capped off by a brilliant, theatrical set from headliner Of Montreal.

Photo by Whitney Walker
Those late to the WARMfest party need not worry. Today’s lineup is stacked. Come out to Broad Ripple Park for big national acts such as Chris Robinson Brotherhood, Big Head Todd and The Monsters and indie rock icons Guided By Voices alongside celebrated locals like Pravada and Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band. My sleeper pick of the day: For $10 you should hop on a boat for a Wapahani River Cruise featuring a performance from Sleeping Bag at 3:45 this afternoon. Purchase tickets to WARMfest online or at the gate.
Written by Rob Peoni
A Joyful Knockout
Editor’s Note: This story was originally published on defunct, Central Indiana arts website Sky Blue Window on September 5, 2014. Some content, style and formatting may differ from the original version.
Despite her young age, Kristin Newborn has made a significant amount of noise in Naptown in the past several years. A classically trained vocalist who has worked with local heavyweights at Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, Newborn first made a splash in Indy’s underground music scene as front woman of the short-lived but much-celebrated Slothpop. In the years since that band’s breakup, Newborn has steadily honed a sound, under the pseudonym KO, based upon intricate vocal loops and straightforward garage rock riffs alongside her minimalist drummer Todd Heaton of Street Spirits.

Courtesy of Joyful Noise Recordings
Today, Joyful Noise Recordings announced it will release KO’s four-song, self-titled EP on Sept. 23. “I just think she’s a great musical presence, and she had these great songs,” says JNR owner and curator Karl Hofstetter. “Most of the time we don’t really f–k around with bands before they have a full-length, but this is kind of an exception just because they’re not really in a place to finish a full-length right now.”
This week, Newborn moved to Chicago following an appearance at WARMfest, where she dedicated her masterful rendition of Ben E. King’s Stand By Me to her hometown crowd as a farewell of sorts. Fortunately for Hoosiers, Newborn hasn’t moved to the moon. She will return to Indy to play an album release show at Radio Radio on Sept. 20 (tickets).
“For me, it was more about solidifying them, so KO doesn’t just become another band that was never properly released,” Hofstetter says. “Kristin will be huge someday, she’s just got that presence. So it was more about supporting her. We’re happy to be lax about this. We’re not making them tour and record a full-length or anything like that. It’s just four songs. We’ll see where it goes.”
Listen to lead single “B-tches Online” and scope the full track listing for the KO EP below. Pre-order your copy of the limited-edition 7″ vinyl via Joyful Noise Recordings.
Track Listing
1. Four Drinks In
2. B-tches Online
3. White Lie
4. Choke
Written by Rob Peoni
Canned Art: Sun King Brewing Canvitational Preview
Editor’s Note: This story was originally published on defunct, Central Indiana arts website Sky Blue Window on September 18, 2014. Some content, style, and formatting may differ from the original version.
Saturday a party will descend on Georgia Street. Beers will be consumed. Good times will inevitably be had. Downtown Indianapolis will be on display for an excited group of out-of-towners. No, it’s not the Super Bowl in September. The second annual CANvitational, hosted by Sun King Brewing will take place.
“Clay wanted to do this so that it would give us a chance to invite some of our friends to come and play, and really highlight Indianapolis and Indiana as a craft beer state,” Director of Promotions and Sponsorships Beth Belange says of Sun King cofounder Clay Robinson.

Courtesy of Sun King
The CANvitational will bring at least 40 breweries from all over the country to Indy for a celebration of craft beer and the aluminum vessels that house it. Previously, cans served as the preferred vehicle for cheap, mass-produced domestic beer, until the craft beer explosion of the last half-decade. “It was sort of a perfect storm of people slowly coming around to the idea of a can. Mobile canning came around. The canning-line manufacturers produced better, cheaper, smaller canning lines. All that stuff just happened all at once. With 2,000 breweries in the country and a lot of craft beer fans, it was kind of the perfect amalgamation,” says Russ Phillips, author of Canned!: Artwork of the Modern American Beer Can and the writer behind craftcans.com.
“We were actually the 56th American craft brewery to can when we started five years ago,” Belange says. “Now, there’s upwards of 500 American craft breweries that are canning.”
As one might guess, this influx has fostered a boom of creativity in the packaging and design of cans as independent brewers attempt to carve out an identity in a growing market. “I think cans, over the years, have really changed. When canning first started, you saw a lot of cans with the same logo on both sides,” Phillips says. “There are so many great designs now. Some of this stuff is so creative and so ridiculous at times that it’s almost hard to pass up.”

Courtesy of Sun King
With this in mind, Sun King partnered with Arts Council of Indianapolis to further the CANvitational’s focus on the artistry behind the can for its second year. During Friday’s brewer’s reception in Indianapolis Artsgarden, local artists will showcase works aimed at transforming the can designs from several of the festival’s participating breweries. Tickets to the event, dubbed CAN’d ART were available for a standalone price of $10 or $5 with a ticket to the CANvitational. (Though just prior to posting this article, Sky Blue Window learned this event is now sold out.)
“There’s not a whole lot that I don’t like about what I do. I’m able to be creative. I’m able to explore different things, try different things,” Sun King art director Shane Brown confesses. “It’s like I always tell everybody, I’ve got the perfect job. I drink and draw for a living, you know? Come on dude [he laughs].”
Brown’s creative involvement with Sun King began at the ground level when Robinson approached him to design the company’s logo. Since then, he has overseen the design of nearly all of Sun King’s can line and branding of everything from truck wraps to T-shirts. With more than 8 million cans sold to date, Brown’s work has been seen by as many people as any Hoosier artist in the past five years.
“It’s pretty nuts. It really is,” Brown says. “We were in Colorado when we went over there to do the [Ball Corp.] cans for Fistful of Hops. Even there, Clay would introduce me as his in-house artist. They were all like, ‘I love your designs!’ and I was like, ‘Whoa, hold on! This is Colorado for God’s sake, and you’re digging my stuff here?’ That’s killer, you know?”

Courtesy of Sun King
Phillips believes beer can design proves much more complex than the process for bottling. “With a bottle, you’ve obviously got a label, but you’ve also got a six-pack holder, which gives you a peripheral billboard to put artwork on. For the most part with cans, the can itself is your billboard,” he says. “The biggest limitation with cans is the way the printing is done. That kind of printing requires the artist to use a set number of colors … You can’t just take a bottle label, put it on a can, and expect it to work out exactly the same. So, there’s actually quite a bit of talent that goes into making something similar or just coming up with something from scratch that uses a limited number of colors. Some of it is pretty amazing.”
For his part, Brown loves the challenge. “I’m an artist, so if I’m not creating or doing something, then I’m going to get bored and go crazy,” he says. “Even on my off time, I’m doing chalkboards at different bars. This weekend I did a big piece for ORANJE. I’ve got to be creating and constantly evolving, otherwise I’m not happy.”
In addition to the artistic offerings at CANvitational, Sun King will debut a collaborative can with Illinois’ Solemn Oath Brewery. It’s the first foray into canning for the brewery, which focuses on Belgian-style beers. For CANvitational Sun King and Solemn Oath partnered on a session IPA, which the duo is calling “30 Minute Coma.” This focus on collaboration is a carryover from the inaugural event, when Sun King partnered with Three Floyds on its Three Kings Pale Ale.
Written by Rob Peoni


