Community Center
Baltimore, Maryland, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2015 | SELF
Music
Press
Community Center is a Baltimore based indie rock band of eclectic composition. This six piece band boasts a cast of multi-instrumentalists who don't shy from tag team vocal work and sound as if they are making music for the simply pleasure of it. Their newest EP is self-titled was released on January 20th of this year. Most notably, Community Center has been seen around town performing at the EMP Collective, the Wind Up Space, and the Baltimore Theater Collective. Check out their tune When I Grow Up I Want To Be Ten Feet Tall below: - Those Who Dig
The infamous HoodSCAPE troupe will lead a parade through Station Arts North at 8PM sharp. Sea shanties? Yes, please!
Theresa Keil was on hand last night for the UpCHUCK preview, and provided these amazing photos with a glimpse of what’s to come! - What Weekly
Band: Community Center
Members: Danny Benbow, saxophone, clarinet, piano, penny whistle, percussion, vocals; Matt Berlin, drums, glockenspiel, vocals; Brian Loeper, guitar, banjo, accordion, piano, vocals; Kevan Mann, piano, trumpet, guitar, vocals; Zachary Mattix, bass, guitar, vocals; Tracey Shindledecker, violin, cello, melodica, vocals
Who we talked to: Loeper, 25
How did you guys meet/ How long have you been performing together? Some of the members I've been playing with now, I've been playing with for almost 10 years. We met through jazz band and orchestras in high school and then at York
College. There are six core members of our band now. It's nice that we have a whole group of people who are able to read music and (are) interested in a lot of different things. We play in a rock band, but, you know, all of us can at the same time turn around and play classical music and jazz.
So you guys play a lot of instruments? Everyone in our band plays more than one instrument. So, we've got the regular guitar, bass and drums, but then we have full horns. We have saxophone. We have trumpet. We have piano (and) the clarinet. We have accordion. We have cello (and) violin. I feel like I'm going to miss out on a whole bunch of these. When we show up it's an enormous amount of instruments. It really comes from us not wanting to repeat ourselves. We kind of want to be able to play ... a funk song. And then here's a really sad pretty song. And here's a rowdy waltz. It's tough when we go to put an album together. (But) it's the way we think the music should sound.
How do you transport everything? (Laughs) It's a nightmare. We've gone on a couple tours now ... to California and back and that's when it's real tricky. We all hum the theme to "Tetris" when we pack our van because there's really only one way everything can fit. It's a pain to keep everything in tune and transport it ... but it's definitely worth it. If nothing else, you know, people remember us as the band where they have a lot of instruments. With the amount of music that's going on right now, it's very difficult to find a foothold that you can call your own.
How did you come up with the name? I used to work at the Jewish Community Center ... in York. There was a big ... yellow banner out front that said "everyone is welcome." That's kind of how we approach who's in the band. The six core members are kind of an unlikely group of friends. We all have very different interests, and we spend our free time very differently. So, if it wasn't for this band it would probably be pretty unlikely that we would end up ... in the same room together. I think (it's like a) community center attraction that way. This lineup that we have (has been together) close to two years now. We have a very open-door policy for people who can come to play with us.
Are you guys headed into the studio? We put (an album) out last year in March. The whole thing can be heard at community
center.bandcamp.com. You can hear it for free there and download it for free. Monday ... we're going into the studio again to start our new one. We've been writing it (and) testing it out on the road and I think we have 11 to 12 songs that are really ready to go. Hopefully we'll have that done by June or July.
What did you learn from the first time in the studio? Right as the recession hit, we all decided (to) quit our jobs and go be musicians. We all packed into ... a little four-door Saturn ... and we went on tour for two months. We wrote these songs (on the first album) very quickly ... and then we took it on the road. This one has been more patiently put together, and we spent a lot more time testing songs out.
Why hit the road instead of playing bars around here? I don't necessarily think that going on the road is better than staying in an area and focusing. It's really fun. I wish I had a more professional answer than that. It's more just, "Hey, we're in our 20s. Let's go on a road trip and play music along the way." There's no doubt that all six of us would love to make this our job. But for the meantime ... we continue to have to work real jobs and then do this in the nighttime. We're going to make this as fun as possible.
Like any other local bands? When we started, we thought, "we have to go to these big cities where lots of things are going on." Our little band that nobody's ever heard of can't compete with what's going on at Madison Square Garden. In Utah ... we were about a half hour away from our venue, and, of all things, I managed to run over sheep in a canyon. Our car got towed one way and somebody unbelievably came and picked up three hitchhikers and all (our) gear and drove us to our show. We got stuck in this little place in Logan, Utah. Maybe it's because we didn't - York Daily Record
“Community Center is a wild show. They perform energetic, soul-filled romp-jams with impressive instrumental chops.” - Human Being Productions
"There is something for any music fan to fall in love with. They'd convey the same energy whether performing for a handful of people or a sold out stadium. Be sure to wear your dancing shoes!" - Switchbitch Noise
“Community Center's music is a striking display of talent and chemistry, soothing and anthemic. This dichotomy creates an experience that I find myself wanting to repeat on an infinite loop.” - Too Good For Radio
“Community Center boasts a cast of multi-instrumentalists who don't shy from tag team vocal work and sound as if they are making music simply for the pleasure of it.” - Those Who Dig
"Rooted in Americana, Community Center adds insane energy, hearty melodies, and intricate instrumentation." - NPR
Discography
Those Animals (2017)
Horns & Thorns (2017)
Live in Las Vegas (2018)
Photos
Bio
It's not often a rock band can stop on a dime for a string-section interlude, only to come roaring back seconds later with a blaring sax solo, but that's just the kind of arrangement the Baltimore band Community Center has built its signature sound on. After working bars, venues, and theaters across the United States, the members of Community Center have found a way to perfectly combine all the rock, jazz, folk, pop, and gospel that they grew up with into a live set that keeps audiences captivated from the first note all the way through the final refrain.
Band Members
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