New York's The Izzy's are playing a free show in Pine Lodge, Myrtleville, Co. Cork on Friday 28th May.
The press:
"Tumbling catchy guitar lines and a healthy dose of attitude are the order of the day…this release has a definite air of the manic frenzied about it." KERRANG
"NYC three-piece that mixes The Strokes with the Stones and will guarantee… a frenzy at their UK gigs in May." NME
"… their bluesy, narcotic rock has enough jangle and hooks to win them a spot in the hearts of folks searching for strident Stones worshippers…" TIME OUT NEW YORK
"Like a pot of baked beans on an open fire, The Izzys is alternative country the way you like it, fresh, hot and mean." CMJ
A brilliant and mercurial thread winds through the landscape of the American songbook like a Cadillac on a lost highway. Chameleon-like, sometimes it shows itself as the high-lonesome yelp of Bill Monroe or the haunting misgivings of Robert Johnson. Other times it is the reverb-drenched bravado of a Sun rockabilly record. And sometimes it's the can't-stop-dancing boogie of any number of dance tunes by Rufus Thomas, The Mighty Hannibal, or Prince. This thread is timeless; it is the quintessence of The American Song.
The Izzys, (Joe Cooney: bass/backing vocals, Tim Kuhl: drums, Mike Storey: guitar/vocals) are a fully realised rock and roll outfit - cast in twang, thunder, and boogie — is driving this thread forward. Their namesake comes from an Alan Lomax field recording and an obscure slave term referring to the friction between sexual and spiritual love, the distance between the sacred and profane; it’s a theme that rock and roll simply couldn't exist without.
Mike Storey first picked up on this thread hearing live bluegrass music in his neighbour's yard as a young boy growing up in Maryland. He started on the guitar and mandolin in his early teens, learning the sounds and cadences of blues, country, soul and rock and roll, writing songs that would lay the architecture for what would become The Izzys.
Fast forward to New York City a decade later.
Storey joins with fellow Marylander Tim Kuhl who plays drums. Though jazz trained, it didn’t take long for Kuhl to adapt his proper jazz style into free flowing, hard hitting rock. Joe Cooney of Philadelphia is the salty, cool bass player singing country harmonies to boot.
The Izzys play rock n roll that paints the landscape of America’s hidden roads, juke joints, church basements, country fairs and carnivals that you can’t help but sing and dance to.
- a bandicoot promotion -
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