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(From L or R) Harry Scarrott, Jason Kuehnle, Max Begler, Nate Ritz, Colin Gasman, Dan Watts. Shot by Chloe Simpson

If you are looking for a hard-hitting album to hyper-fixate on, I have the perfect album and band for you. Sunny Daze & the Weathermen recently released their debut album “Sunny Daze for President” which is a hard-hitting groove consisting of the elements of garage rock, neo-psychedelic, alternative, and post-punk. The sound of the Weathermen comes from Max Begler (lead vocals/guitar), Nate Ritz (guitar/vocals), Zach Thal (guitar), Jason Kuehnle (keys), Colin Gasman (bass/saxophone), Dan Watts (drums/vocals), and Harry Scarrott (percussion). Members of Sunny Daze & the Weathermen also belong to other Pittsburgh-based acts! We had a chance to talk to the group about their new album and all things rain or shine. 


Who are your biggest musical influences?

Max: I made a list once of every band or musician that’s inspired me over the years and at current I think it sits around 250 some names. If I had to narrow it down I’d say The Velvet Underground, The Doors, The Stooges, The Monks, Dead Kennedys, Gil Scott Heron, Dizzy Gillespie, Art Blakey, Willie Bobo, John Dwyer, and I know he’s an author, but William Burroughs. 


Jason: I come from a jazz/funk background - a lot of my sound caters back to 2020 when I had nothing better to do than to watch every single Vulfpeck tutorial. I also take a lot of inspiration from other bands in the Pittsburgh music scene - I’ve learned how to fine-tune my sound from Moontown, I’ve learned how to groove from Wild Blue Yonder, and I’ve learned how to master stage presence from Pitter Patter, just to name a few. 


Colin: I like a lot of jam/Americana stuff and it definitely carries over into how I approach playing bass. I draw a lot of influence from Phil Lesh (Grateful Dead) and Allen Woody (Allman Brothers Band/Gov’t Mule). They play in such a way that they’ll be in the forefront when you least expect it, all while laying down a real solid backbone to the song. They also play with such power when they need to. Despite the genre difference, this approach is super applicable in so many formats. 


Nate: For playing guitar in this band, I get inspired by players like John Scofield, Jimi Hendrix, Joe Walsh, Bill Frisell, and Nels Cline who can blur the lines between Rock N' Roll, Jazz, experimental blues and Noise.  But for recording and mixing, lately it’s current bands like Suuns, Spirit of the Beehive, IDLES, and Viagra Boys that have influenced me in a more experimental approach to production.


Harry: One of my biggest influences is man by the name of Darren King , former drummer of one of my all time favorite bands, Mutemath. However I tend to try to take in as much new and old music of different genres to keep learning. There is a band called Everything Everything that has been on heavy rotation for me at the moment. 


Dan: When it comes to my drumming style, I’d say I draw most of my inspiration from mainly two types of music: Garage psych and post/dance punk. In the realm of garage I find myself pulling ideas from bands like Osees (double drumming FTW), Ty Segall and his various projects, The Mystery Lights, and a bunch of others too. Post punk and dance punk has also been a big part of my development. Groups like The Rapture, LCD Soundsystem, !!!, The Faint, etc etc



I’ve been asking all the Pittsburgh-based bands this question; What makes the Pitt music scene so unique? 

Jason: The variety and the friendships. There’s such a vast amount of amazing bands playing different styles - every weekend there will be 10 different shows all showcasing a different style, so there’s always something for every music lover. On top of that, my favorite part is that it’s such a tightly knit community. Every show I play I can look out into the crowd and see several people from other bands there. Everyone goes out of their way to support each other and learn from each other. I’ve made life-long friends from the Pittsburgh music scene (except for those Weathermen, those guys are weird) thanks to how welcoming and supportive everyone is. 


The vocals in the album are hard hitting and right in your face. What did the mixing and recording process look like?

Nate:  We started with getting demos of all the songs with Max and Dan, vocals guitar drums.. Everybody listened to the demos, wrote and recorded multiple parts (either in their own home studio or in the Sunny D Studio). With the help of Max and Dan’s vision I mixed all the parts into Sunny Daze For President.  Max has many vocal parts and a presence in this album that gets unnervingly close, but all the musical personalities on the album have their moments to shine.  We wanted to be loud, we wanted to be heard and we wanted to try things we’ve never done before.  



The art style for this album is incredible; what was the inspiration and process for that?

Max: We had a couple different ideas initially, most of which were collage based. So we knew that much. But when Madelynne Martin, who does our designs, started making the single covers the other ideas got scrapped and we just gave Madelynne a list of possible items for a collage and she made it. 


Dan: I think the collage-y, eclectic nature of the album and single art for this project perfectly sums up the way the different styles we play on the record come together to form one cohesive piece. 


This album makes me want to take a roadtrip in the 80s - if you joined the trip, where is our first stop?

Max: Ooo tough one. I’d say a southwest trip ending in San Francisco for sure. Lots of psych rock country the whole ride please. 


Jason: I was born in 2001 so I don’t know what went on in the 80s. I’ll go wherever Max doesn’t go. 


Harry: Our first stop on a road trip would have to be a Buc-ee’s … I’ve never been and I hear some great things. Then from there we could go to the salt flats and see true desolation (my kinda place)


Dan: A 7/11 near Disney World at 2:30AM in 1987



What is your favorite lyric in this album?

Max: “Because this pro quo is quid” Off of Wasting my time, because I think it’s a really stupid lyric but I’ve committed now and it makes me laugh. 


Harry: the verses of what you’ve done to me are my favorite. That song came together pretty organically and seemed to almost make itself… almost. 


Dan: “There’s no more movies, there’s no more cake, just thick black smoke at dawn's first break.” Such a weird and powerful line. No more of the pleasures in life for you or me, only environmental destruction. 


Sunny Daze & the Weathermen have so many talented members, how do you guys stay on top of playing gigs and recording?

Max: Honestly we have a lot of commitment from everyone so setting up practices is much less pulling teeth and much more just working around. 


Dan: Really it comes down to coordinating schedules. With so many members, it’s hard, but we make it work because we all really care about the project. 



Favorite gig you’ve ever played? If you don’t have one, do you have a favorite venue you always like to play at?

Max: Either the first time we played The Black Lodge and the floor almost fell through, the last time we played Penn State and someone busted a hole in the drywall while dancing, or playing Spirit for our album release. Honorable mention to 123 Pleasant in WVU. That place rules. 


Jason: My favorite was the time we played an outdoors South Oakland show during Pitt’s O-Week and the cops shut us down right before we were supposed to go on. It was a traumatizing experience but taught us valuable life lessons. In reality though my favorite gig was probably playing at Smiling Moose in October because it was the first time my parents got to see me play live. 


Colin: 123 Pleasant was such a fun place to play. I’m dying to go back there. But the album release show takes the cake - the energy was off the charts and it was so awesome to see so many people come out and support us! Really makes all the hard work worthwhile. 


Harry: It’s hard to top the album release this past weekend but one of my favorite Sunny Daze gigs was in Morgantown at 123 Pleasant Street. It’s just a wonderful venue that treats bands right.


Dan: My favorite gig was our recent album release show at Spirit on February 16th. It was a ton of hard work by the band and coordination on my part, working to make this event come together. We packed the room, sold out the show. We had a light show and a tattoo artist doing flash tattoos. It was truly an event. Tons of fun with my favorite people. 


What’s next for Sunny Daze & the Weathermen?

Max: We’ve had a backlog of like 30-50 new songs or jams we need to sort through, finish, and iron out. We want to get as Freakier, noisier, fuzzier, synthier, and high energy as possible. More traveling this year too! Whatever we’re doing, we’re going to keep it Weird!


As you can see, this group has a true passion for what they do and strive to share their art with the world. You can listen to “Sunny Daze for President” down below and see everything the band has done on www.sunnydazeandtheweathermen.com!


Written and Interviewed by Mark Bluemle

Photography by Chloe Simpson







Written and Interviewed by Veronica Anaya

Photography and Production Managed by Mark Bluemle

PA: Veronica Anaya, Gabby Sirianni


From lifelong friends who would practice in the basement of their high school to rock stars touring the country alongside incredible names, Quarters of Change, the alternative rock band from New York City, have made a name for themselves. The band consists of members Ben Roter (vocals, guitar, and lyrics), Ben Acker (guitar, bass, synth), Attila Anrather (drums), and Jasper Harris (guitar, bass, synth). They formed in 2017, initially as a cover band in high school, with Acker joining in 2019 to finalize the lineup. Since then, they have released multiple EPs and an album, Into the Rift, with their newest project, Portraits, set to be released in January 2024. Their influences fluctuate between Prince, The Strokes, The Who, Red Hot Chili Peppers, and Police, but they do not shy away from experimentation as they continue to develop as a band and as artists.

We talked with Quarters of Change and discussed their upcoming album, Portraits, performing in NYC, and so much more.


How did everyone meet?

[Ben Acker]: Jasper and I met in pre-school, the rest of us met in 8th grade.


[Ben Roter]: We all joined the music program at our high school, and we were all best friends, so we decided to be a band.


Where did the name Quarters of Change come from?

[BR]: We have an affinity for money.



Most of you have been playing together for a while, has the dynamic changed since?

[BR]: It’s changed for the better. We’re all continuing to grow as musicians. It doesn't feel like our personal dynamic has changed, though. We’re still best friends.


[BA]: Our writing process is super different. At the root it’s the same, but it’s more efficient now.


What is it like growing a band in NYC?

[BA]: It’s challenging. When we were in high school, rock was not a thing. I wasn’t even listening to rock at that time.



Do you think being from NYC and the music culture that is here, impacted or affected your band in any way?

[BA]: It’s developed our healthy sense of competition. We’re not the only people in this city, certainly not the only people trying to do music. Definitely different from being a band in a suburban garage.


[BR]: Cutting through this giant metropolis has been challenging, it’s driven and pushed us.


You are touring and traveling a lot as a band, what is it like when you perform or come back to NYC?

[BR]: That’s homecoming, you know. Nothing like it. But, my favorite thing about being from the city and touring outside of it, is then coming back to the city where you become one of 8 million again - that anonymity can be nice.


[BA]: Yet we still have our biggest shows here. That’s always reassuring. Especially because people are nicer everywhere outside New York.



What have been your greatest moments in your musical career?

[BA]: Probably when we signed. It made it all feel real. The music has always been real, but to be able to do this, actually do this, it didn’t feel real until we signed.


[BR]: When we were on our first tour support with Bad Suns, driving through California. I was listening to The Smiths, there were all these snow-capped mountains, and I thought to myself - “You know what? Life is pretty cool. I like it a lot..I’m gonna keep doing it.”


[Jasper Harris]: Some of the earlier shows felt bigger than the shows we play now. Some of those moments before getting on stage for not that many people were pretty exhilarating, feeling those butterflies. Pretty crazy shit. You get that once or twice –


[BR]: – In your life.


[Attila Anrather]: They’re all great.


Do you like the smaller shows you performed at the beginning of your band's journey or your bigger shows?

[BR]: There was something more nerve wracking about the intimate, smaller shows. Feels more personal. My stage fright has gotten better as we’ve moved to bigger rooms. In high school, my hands would shake if I had to speak in front of class. I had such trouble doing that in front of smaller crowds. As the crowd gets bigger, it feels like more of a dream and easier to do as a result. I can’t comprehend how many people are in the audience.


[JH]: I completely feel that. I was definitely more nervous when you can actually distinguish faces.


[BR]: – And you can hear little conversations.


[JH]: It used to be mostly family, and performing in front of family is so nerve wracking. As opposed to tons of strangers, which doesn't freak me out at all.


What is your favorite part of a show day?

[BA]: The show.



What is your dream venue to perform at? Why?

[BR]: I really wanna play Red Rocks. Or the Sphere in Las Vegas. That shit looks fucking dope.


[AA]: I’m gonna go with the Sphere.


[BA]: The O2 Arena.


[JH]: Wherever Glastonbury is.


If you could play swap instruments with another member, what would you play?

[BA]: Drums.


[JH]: Drums.


[BR]: Drums.


[AA]: Drums.


Your process for Portraits was an interesting one, as you did it all while in a cabin for two weeks, how did that change your musician process or even the way the song came out?

[BR]: Yeah, we decided to go all out for it. We decided to write everything in a live room. Play it, and write it like that. We made demos for everything, and then went back into the studio and recorded everything again. It had to hit in a live room before it hit on a recording. We’ll definitely take the lessons we learned from it into account, but I don’t really like to do anything twice.



Is there a meaning behind your artwork/ creative direction for your upcoming album?

[AA]: We really focused on capturing the members of the band for this project. Both in a literal sense of pictures of each member on the single covers, the group picture of the band for the album cover, but also the drawings on the covers that represent us as people in a more abstract sense.


Has your musician influence changed from the music you made in 2018 to the music you make now?


[BR]: We were 18 and now we’re 23, so take from that what you will.


[BA]: It’s better.


A lot of your music is vulnerable and written from personal experience, what does the writing process look like? Does it ever get too difficult to write and be vulnerable?

[BR]: When you have inspiration, it’s easy. When you don’t it’s harder. For this project, writing in the live room and crafting the lyrics to fit the live performance vibe was definitely a new process. There are a lot of different writing tips and tools that I’ve added to my arsenal. But a lot of it is closing my eyes, letting a stream of consciousness come out, and revising that stream of consciousness.



Are there any of your older songs that you would want to revisit and revamp to your sound now?

[BR]: Yeah, we did. Depression II on the new project.


Which song you are lyrically/ instrumentally proud of?

[BR]: Keep My Blood is my favorite.


[JH]: Turn It Away.


[BA]: I’d say Turn It Away as well.


What do you want people to get out of Quarters of Change?

[BA]: You can do anything you want. If you want it bad enough.


The beloved Quarters of Change are ending their fall/winter tour on Saturday, December 9th, at Webster Hall performing, alongside The Backfires, another NYC-based rock group, and Laundry Day, a band that happens to have gone to the same high school as Quarters of Change.


Get your tickets before you miss out on the show of the year!!


Written and Interviewed by Veronica Anaya

Photography and Production Managed by Mark Bluemle

PA: Veronica Anaya, Gabby Sirianni



Written by Lucy Anderson

Photographer: Hailey Pickens

Creative Director: Catalina Torres

Production Manager: Sophia Querrazzi

Featured designer: @gisessories on instagram

Talent: @claude.paolucci @Willflashnick @kaleb.pereira922 @ellyadira @eastzu_ on instagram


The holiday season is a difficult time for traveling anywhere, even if you’re avoiding the more touristy attractions. Getting from store to store to complete your Christmas shopping can be a hassle. As someone who has been able to travel frequently, even if it’s mostly by subway, and someone who hates dealing with people (especially during the holiday season) here is my collection of tried and true travel tips to get you through the busy bustling streets that holidays produce.


Head Up!

This one feels obvious but we're all guilty of doing this at some point or another. When you’re walking down the street (especially if you’re in a brand new city) it’s easy to get completely absorbed in whatever map app you’re using. However, this can make you look like the ultimate tourist, and disrupt the flow of traffic (especially if you’re somewhere as busy as NYC.) The best thing to do when you need to check out your map is “pull over” - aka stand aside so you’re not taking up the entire sidewalk - and figure out where you’re headed before blindly gluing your eyes to your phone screen.



Plan Ahead

Planning ahead can feel like another obvious travel tip, but it doesn’t hurt to be given a reminder. Planning ahead can make or break your entire trip. Research ahead of time what and where the best restaurants are, especially if you’re like me and have dietary restrictions, and decide how far away from your hotel you want to travel to make the best of your holiday!



Hydrate

This tip is one that people tend to forget about. Staying hydrated, especially if you’re traveling by plane or walking a lot more than you’re used to, can totally change how you feel. If you stay hydrated and take care of yourself as much as possible, vacation should be a breeze.



Pack Light and Consolidate

Packing light is something we all say we’re gonna do, and yet somehow when we reach our destination our suitcase is almost completely full with no room for souvenirs or new purchases. So, to prevent the stress and struggle that an overstuffed suitcase can bring, make sure to pack light and consolidate what you bring. I mean, do you really need 10 pairs of socks for a 3-day trip?



Know Where You’re Going

Knowing where you’re going goes hand in hand with tips one and two, but it’s so important I’m giving it its own bullet point. This doesn’t mean you need to know exactly where you’re going and where you are, but looking at maps ahead of time (hey Google Maps I love you) and getting a sense of what’s around you can make you feel so much better. Having at least a small sense of familiarity with the area you’re visiting is always a great idea, and can improve your traveling overall.



Give Yourself Wiggle Room

This especially applies to trips that involve a lot of reservations for meals or other activities. Being on time (especially for more expensive experiences) is super important. Be sure to give yourself travel time between activities, and always check if there’s a late window for reservations you make. Most restaurants are kind enough to allow a 15-minute grace period after the scheduled reservation, but it doesn’t hurt to double-check.



Always Carry Cash

I know my parents aren’t the only ones to give this advice, but with so many places going cashless, and our cards being saved on our phones, we can forget about cash. But, when traveling to a new place, it’s important to remember to bring some cash. Some small businesses and markets only take cash, and it’s good to be able to leave a tip when you’re going out to eat.



Don’t Overbook

Your vacation should be relaxing! Yes, it’s always exciting to visit a new place, but it won’t be as fun as it could be if you’re running around from place to place. Personally, I love seeing/doing/experiencing as many things as possible when I’m traveling, but for some reason, a nap in a hotel in a different state is the best nap of all time. With that being said, make sure to get plenty of rest and relaxation, while still exploring as much as possible.


People Watch

People-watching is one of my favorite activities in the world. It’s free, it’s entertaining, and it is so easy to do. If you’re visiting a major city, especially if you’re visiting NYC, people-watching can just kind of happen without even trying. So if you have nothing to do, or if you need to take a break and figure out where you’re going, sit in a public park or somewhere similar and just enjoy the many different facets that humanity has.



Make the Most of It

Traveling can be stressful. It can be expensive, exhausting, and frustrating. BUT (yes, there is a but) it can also be part of a time that holds some of the best memories and experiences you’ll ever have. Or it can just be a normal, fun, exciting, familial, or adventurous vacation/trip. No matter what type of travel you’re doing, be sure to make the most of your experiences wherever you go, with whoever you’re with.


Happy holiday season and happy traveling! Be safe!


Written by Lucy Anderson

Photographer: Hailey Pickens

Creative Director: Catalina Torres

Production Manager: Sophia Querrazzi

Featured designer: @gisessories on instagram

Talent: @claude.paolucci @Willflashnick @kaleb.pereira922 @ellyadira @eastzu_ on instagram

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