Fri, 03/05/2021 - 2:03 pm

Reggae has a long history and deep, sacred roots as a music of resistance to the authoritarian establishment — it is protest music we can dance to freely while taking a united stand against political corruption, racism, and social injustice.

West Coast alternative rock and reggae band Cydeways has just delivered a potent reminder of that essential connection with the release of their new single  “We Won’t Run” featuring legendary Hawaiian reggae-rock band Pepper. The timely and socially relevant single comes ahead of the band’s first full-length album with LAW Records, slated to be released later this year.

Calling attention to the unprecedented era of racial violence and social discontent we now find ourselves living in, the powerful track combines the visceral energy of Rage Against the Machine with the poetic and political potency of Bob Marley’s “Get Up, Stand Up”:

As we stand, there’s a gun up in their hand 

telling us to back down while we’re screaming “fuck the man”

We can’t eat, can’t sleep, 

‘We can’t breathe’

So why would I have to do what you believe?

Over a million screaming that they’re finally done

But we ain’t gonna run…

With superbly profound lyrics and grooves punctuated by spring reverb hits like ominous gunshots, Cydeways evokes images of the day Minneapolis police officers publicly murdered George Floyd in a blatant public display of institutionalized racism, while at once declaring a vehement collective manifesto that we will not submit to the hatred and governmental monopoly on violence that both infects and defines our current national zeitgeist.

“The chorus says it all!” asserts Cydeways founder and frontman Dustin Parks.  “It’s a message to the negative forces that we won’t back down and become complacent with everything that’s going on in our society right now. Despite the mass unemployment, the racism, the fear, and all this crazy shit going on…we won’t become that. Cydeways has never really talked about anything like this before, so I think the song is also a sign of how we are growing as a band”.

Cydeways was originally started by Parks and Trevor Buckingham in Boston, MA as a self-described ‘basement project’. Eager for new opportunities, he ended up moving the project out to California, eventually landing in Santa Barbara, where he met and recruited Jeremy Baker on guitar, Casey Kernohan on drums. Parks co-produced the track with Buckingham & Dana Shoults, who both pulled double-duty as engineers.

In this fully rounded-out emanation, Cydeways began playing shows and recording extensively, earning themselves a reputation among their peers as a solid band. Eventually, Parks’s friend Joe D. from Iration introduced Parks to core Pepper member Yesod Williams, who was impressed enough to sign the band to his quickly growing reggae label LAW Records.

 In 2020, Cydeways released their debut EP After Hours, featuring veteran reggae bands like Ballyhoo! and Grieves. Late last year, the band followed up by releasing a dub remix of their 2018 song “Shadows” (feat. Grieves), performed by E.N Young. Currently, Cydeways is working on wrapping up their long-anticipated full-length LP to be released later this year.

Tue, 12/14/2021 - 2:45 pm

Whether as a formidable solo artist or in the role of charismatic frontman for legendary, Grammy Award-winning reggae band Black Uhuru for the past 25 years, Andrew Bees has played a significant role in the breaking down of cultural and socio-political barriers that have often kept Jamaican reggae stars out of the American mainstream consciousness.

Teaming up with SoCal independent label LAW Records for the release of his latest  solo release “Real Life” (Out Dec.10 2021), Bees now continues that legacy of bringing his personal brand of conscious roots reggae to a new generation of audiences and emerging reggae artists, while subsequently delivering a potent reminder of reggae’s capacity for social critique.

Characterized by wailing guitars pitched over a surging, trance-inducing groove and Bees’ wide-ranged and almost ecstatic vocal delivery of  lyrics that conjure the freedom of rolling down mythic American highways —the track’s upbeat sound  belies unspoken layers of meaning and the events that inspired the song.

Bees was travelling in Kenya with his wife and baby when the Covid-19 pandemic broke out in Feb. of 2020, and as such, he and his small family were among the first panicked waves of American citizens scrambling to board last-minute flights and hastily return home at the behest of the U.S. government.

Bees describes his experience, “CNN news said everybody get out and come back to America because  they're going to be shutting down  and going to be no flights from other countries. And they make it sound like all the people gonna start dropping like flies, man. I was so panicked for my wife and baby. And when we finally land in San Francisco, there was a lot of doctors and nurses at the airport meeting us, man, making us take tests and asking us questions like we bring back the disease.”

Driving home from the SF airport to his home in Antioch, CA curing the final leg of his harrowing journey, Bees notes there were no people, no cars, no life in sight, “...just an eerie feeling like the world is going to hell and the only safe place to be is in your house.

Stayin isolated in the house like that for months, with the news feeding you fear that grows like a parasite inside you, til you convinced you living one of those Apocalypse movies where people just smelling the breeze, man, and there's disease in the air. But after a time, I was like start feeling homesick for the world I knew before. Like we are living in the Matrix and wishing we can get back in the real world. That's when the words of the song came to me.”

living the real life
meditation is so high,
and I'm rolling on the highway

“I was missing being on the road, touring and meeting the people. As much as the news tell you people be selfish and dangerous and stay away from others, without people, there is no world, man. Nothing's going on. When you see no cars and make no connection with people …that's not a good feeling. You start feeling empty without people, feeling empty without your friends. And you feeling empty without the work you do because, as musicians, we are people who are used to travelling freely and being onstage. That's our life. Our power comes from the people. The people is the power and the power is the people”.

This statement reflects a long-held Andrew Bees philosophy that the children are the future, and by connecting humanity through music, artists can pass the torch and assure that future has been pollinated with good vibes.

Growing up in Kingston’s notorious Waterhouse District, Andrew Bees was exposed to and influenced by the best Reggae, R & B, and soul singers Jamaica had to offer.  At the young age of 14, he became a regular performer on the popular "Colgate Cavity Fighters Club" program on Radio Jamaica. That experience exposed his talents to reggae greats Augustus Pablo, Half Pint, Hugh Mundell, King Everald, and Wayne "Sleng Teng" Smith, who invited him to join them on their respective stage shows.

Andrew recorded his first songs "Life In The Ghetto," "Struggle and Strive," and "Be Cool" in 1989/1990 on Castro Brown's New Name Music Productions label. In 1993, He was invited to perform on Bunny Wailer's 100 Artist "Ghetto Bash Concert" at the Jam World Entertainment Center in Jamaica. The following year, Bees collaborated with Fitzroy Francis on the single "Things A Gwan, Things A Go Dun," leading to the production of his first solo studio album Militant, which was eventually released in 1995 on R.A.S Records in the United States and on Sony Records in Japan.

In 1996, Andrew was invited to join Black Uhuru as lead vocalist, touring extensively with the band in Brazil, Europe, North America, and Central America. Two years later, he recorded his first studio album as lead singer for Black Uhuru entitled Unification, which was produced by the legendary King Jammy's. In 2000, Bees recorded his second studio album with Black Uhuru entitled Dynasty for the US-based label R.A.S. Records. And in 2001, Bees was featured on Black Uhuru's live album Dubbing It Live, recorded at The Paléo Music Festival in Nyon, Switzerland.

In 2006, Andrew released his second solo album titled I-ration, produced by Walter Fraser and released on his Vizion Sounds label. Over the next few years, in between tours with Black Uhuru, Bees continued to sharpen his skills in preparation for a solo career: His single "Something Strange" was released in 2012 on the Mighty In Battle Riddim project that was produced by Fitzroy Francis on his Mightyful13 Records Label. In September of the same year he recorded "Better Must Come," a tribute to the late Great Delroy Wilson that charted impressively, reaching the #1 position on several US and International Top 30 Music Charts. A second tribute to Delroy Wilson entitled "Cool Operator" would follow on 2013’s the Operator Rhythm Velocity project, also  produced by Fitzroy Francis and released on Mightyful13 Records.

In 2019, Andrew Bees formed his own record label and trademarked brand called Beeshive Music. Since its inception, Beeshive Music has been instrumental in elevating the youth of the Waterhouse district in Kingston, Jamaica, supporting and encouraging the youth to “get off the streets and into music” in favor of creating a more positive future.

Not long after, Bees signed a deal with LAW Records.  Owned and operated by the prolific artist/entrepreneurs of reggae-rock band Pepper (Yesod Williams, Kaleo Wassman, and Bret Bollinger), the independent SoCal label shared Bees’ commitment to passing the torch and has been equally invested in developing the next generation of reggae artists and connecting the genre’s wide open future with its legendary Jamaican roots.

Says LAW General Manager Paul Milbury, “What we wanted to do is connect the burgeoning American and Cali reggae scene back to the original Jamaican legends, who helped create the scene that inspired this one: Andrew Bees is certainly among those legends and we are honored to be putting out his latest solo work.”

“Real Life” features Bingy on drums and percussion, Devon Bradshaw on bass, Valter Vincenti on lead guitar, and Andrew Diamond on guitar, keyboards, and backing vocals.  Under the direction of prolific agent, Project Manager and Artistic Director Robert Oyugi of Ujama Designs, the track was recorded at Nice n Up and AXX Studios. It was produced by Andrew Diamond, and was mixed by Andrew Seidel at SUB80.

The “Real Life” single is out now on LAW Records and available on all major streaming platforms.

Wed, 05/04/2022 - 5:21 pm

Florida-based reggae rockers Kash’d Out release new single “Highway Robbery” featuring Katastro and announce 2022 tour dates with Iration

With a solid reputation as the hardest working band in reggae-rock, Kash’d Out delivers an anthem for everyone committed to the daily grind with their new “Highway Robbery” (out April 29, 2022, on LAW Records). The defiantly energetic collaboration with mainstay American alternative rock band Katastro represents the pentacle of Kash’d Outs’ songwriting and musicianship while maintaining the signature spirit, positive energy, and uncommon entrepreneurial hustle for which the band has always been known.

Kash’d Out are no strangers to rolling with the punches as they come and they know a combination of hard work, commitment to fans, and an audacious spirit of determination are required to keep  focused and blaze through any roadblocks that may arise on the slow and steady road to success.  “Highway Robbery” exemplifies that steadfast quality, which has won the band the support of a dedicated national fanbase of music lovers who show up to their performances in droves, as well as the respect of their musical peers and veterans in the music industry.

“I think I speak for all artists when I say it ain’t easy doing what we do, '' says Kash’d Out lead singer Greg Shields. “With every bit of growth comes another expense, and it’s crucial to our momentum. We put all we’ve got and then some into our operation so when there’s a roadblock, we’re going to blaze right through it to get where we need to be. Andy from Katastro slayed his verse, which for me is the icing on the cake because they’re out there grinding too!  We’ve been playing this song live and people ask about it often so I’m very excited for April 29th!”  

The single arrives just as Kash’d Out is embarking on a national multi-city tour with reggae-pop favorites Iration (see tour dates below).

Kash’d Out’s steady road to success began when guitarist Jackson Hauserman and vocalist Greg Shields met at Sound Lounge Studios, where Shields had been working with bands such as Ballyhoo and Tribal Seeds. The two hit it off, and after putting together their first self-titled debut EP, they recruited Hauserman’s old high school friend Joey Brohawn, who migrated from Baltimore to Florida to join on bass and later added Marshall Hearne on drums and Nick Gudzan on keys.

In this fully rounded-out emanation, the band released their first full-length album The Hookup in 2017 on LAW Records. That record climbed to #2 on both the Billboard and iTunes Reggae Charts just as the band began touring nationally, sharing the stage with fan favorites like Pepper, Less Than Jake, The Expendables, and many others.

Building on the momentum of their previous record, Kash’d Out released their sophomore album Undercover in 2019, featuring the mixing expertise of Paul Leary (Sublime, Butthole Surfers, etc.) The result was an incredibly strong pop-reggae album full of catchy hooks and choruses.

In October of 2020, popular social media influencer doggface208 uploaded a video of himself skateboarding while jamming out to the studio version of  "Good at Gettin' By". The video quickly went viral and bounced off quite a bit of airplay on alternative radio as a result. The track’s popularity made it an obvious starting point to introduce the 2021 acoustic album Casual Encounters, released on LAW Records.

“Highway Robbery” will be available on April 29, 2022, on all major streaming platforms.

2022 Kash’d Out tour dates with Iration:

MAY 5 - Iration & Kash'd Out - The Mission Ballroom, Denver, CO
MAY 6 - Iration w/ Kash'd Out - Slowdown - Omaha, NE
MAY 7 - Iration w/ Tropidelic & Kash'd Out - Sanctuary Events Center - Fargo, ND
MAY 8 - Iration w/ Tropidelic & Kash'd Out -The District - Sioux Falls, SD
MAY 10 - Iration w/ Tropidelic & Kash'd Out - First Avenue - Minneapolis, MN
MAY 12 - Iration w/ Tropidelic & Kash'd Out - The Castle Theater - Bloomington, IL
MAY 13 - Iration w/ Tropidelic & Kash'd Out - The Rave - Eagles Club - Milwaukee, WI
MAY 14 - Iration w/ Tropidelic & Kash'd Out - The Intersection - Grand Rapids, MI
MAY 15 - Iration w/ Tropidelic & Kash'd Out - The Bluestone - Columbus, OH
MAY 18 - Iration w/ Tropidelic & Kash'd Out - Bogart's - Cincinnati, OH
MAY 19 - Iration w/ Tropidelic & Kash'd Out - Roxian Theatre - Mckees Rocks, PA
MAY 20 -Sunny Days 2022 - Nelson Ledges Quarry Park - Portage County, Ohio
MAY 21 - Iration w/ Kash'd Out - The Vogue, Indianapolis, IN
MAY 22 - Iration w/ Tropidelic & Kash'd Out - The Caverns - Grundy County, TN
MAY 27 - California Roots - Monterey, CA
MAY 28 - Arise Music Festival 2022 - The Cradle - Boone, CO
JUNE 3 - Kash'd Out at Covellite Showcase 2022 - Covellite Theater - Butte, MT

You can check for updates and live dates at https://kashdout.com/tour-dates