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Charlie Heim

Drummer and Educator

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AbsolutePunk reviews The March Hare's EP →

Our teenage idols over at AbsolutePunk.net handed down a 74% rating for our first offering, and that's alright by me. 

"The best description of The March Hare’s record is that it is like being at a mad tea party. Things are happening around you that don’t make sense and it all freaks you out. There are moments of softness, but they are superseded by the factions of chaos and disorganization in the atmosphere."

I think the chaos is exactly what we aimed for. 

"The March Hare act like five friends who fiddle around with their chord dimensions, reaching well beyond the limits of what other artists produce. Not only is the music esoteric and radical but it goes way past the barriers of standard chord notations."  

Thanks for the words, Susan. Check out the full review here, and if you wanna take a post core time machine to 2004, listen to the EP here. 

tags: The March Hare, absolutepunk
categories: press
Monday 01.07.08
Posted by Charlie Heim
 

Mountain Man voted Philly's Best by Emergenza

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Sweet, sweet victory!  Facing the toughest of competion from Philadelphia, Delaware and New Jersey, Philly’s own Mountain Man triumphed at the Emergenza regional finals on Saturday, June 30th.  Held at the Trocadero main stage, the Men went up against 12 other fantastic bands and came out on top.  This win secured Mountain Man as Philly’s best both by audience mandate as well as the approval of a panel of judges: those in attendance at the Troc voted the band into the top 6, while the judges made the final call to place them at number one.  It was an electrifying evening.

Last Friday, July 6th, Mountain Man moved on to the Emergenza Eastern National Finals, where they subsequently rocked the pants off of New York City’s Webster Hall.  There, they faced 27 other bands from all over the east coast, and were placed seventh by a panel of judges.  

Mountain Man would like to sincerely thank all of the fans, family, and friends that came out with their support every step of the way.  This excitement and adventure would not have happened without you!  For more information on the band, be sure to visit Mountain Man’s MySpace page.

 

tags: mountain man, emergenza, william gruff, william gruff self-titled
categories: press
Monday 08.13.07
Posted by Charlie Heim
 

Summer Jazz in State College: 2007 edition

 As many of you devoted readers already know, I spent the last 10 days in the old hometown of State College, PA.  My main reason for the stay was to take my position on the staff of the Penn State Summer Jazz camp, as mentioned in my last post.  While there, I taught drum set masterclasses, performed with some amazingly talented faculty, directed big bands, and my own jazz combo.  The latter, I might add, rocked the roof off of Penn State’s Esber Recital Hall with their own swingin arrangement of Led Zepplin’s Rock n’ Roll, and the 4 big bands swung with authority thanks to some very skilled drummers.  Kudos to all of the students!

Aside from the whirlwind of PSU Jazz, I also had the pleasure of performing with State College jazz mainstay Rick Hirsch on multiple occasions.  To see details from the most recent hit at the Bellefonte Courthouse, check out the Centre Daily Times article.  I’ll be playing with Hirsch’s group, which consists of Hirsch on saxophones, Jim Robinson on bass, and Mac Himes on guitar, again on August 17th.  Check the Performances page for more details!  

 

Below are some more photos from the Bellefonte performance.  All photos by Arthur Heim.

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tags: jazz drumming, jazz, rick hirsch, Centre Daily Times
categories: press
Tuesday 07.24.07
Posted by Charlie Heim
 

The March Hare in Philadelphia Weekly →

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Last week’s issue of Philadelphia Weekly featured a very nice review of The March Hare’s People Dressed as People EP, and I thought that I should share it with all of you.  Click here to read the review on PW’s archive page, or simply scroll on down and read it here.  Good times, and thanks to Doug Wallen for the kind words.

"The March Hare lurch and spazz through their action-packed People Dressed as People EP with such agility it's hard to believe they're not better known around town. Any description of their madcap racket is bound to fall short, but imagine the Blood Brothers hijacking Icy Demons. (“Overture” even turns all twinkling and Stereolab-ish when the girl sings.) The EP can be downloaded for free at www.themarchharemusic.com; an act of kindness more Philly bands should try. Once you've learned their songs, hit one (or both) of the March Hare's shows in the coming week and experience the blitz firsthand."

tags: The March Hare, Philadelphia Weekly
categories: press
Sunday 05.06.07
Posted by Charlie Heim
 

34th Street Magazine meets The March Hare →

34th Street's Alex Jacobs came by our rehearsal one afternoon to see our madness firsthand in preparation for their Streetapalooza event. 

Every Sunday, the March Hare practices in the basement of Zack Guy-Frank’s parents’ home in Mt. Airy. Set apart from file-boxes and suburban house detritus, the corner practice studio is filled with what look like expensive gadgets. The big table nearby is littered with parts and audio odds and ends. Guy-Frank, lead vocalist and a Penn sophomore, brings together a group whose backgrounds are as diverse as their tastes in music: two have been students at the University of the Arts, one is a classically-trained violinist, another builds custom bass guitars. Last week, the band’s five members settled in comfortably for another six-hour practice session. The whole scene has something of That ’70s Show to it – for their goofy, self-effacing dynamic as much as their basement hideaway. “Alicia and I were in a band in a past life,” jokes Zack. “In the ’70s,” violinist Alicia Ritter replies.

The band first formed in 2004 after Zack, then a high school junior, posted flyers at University of the Arts. The original lineup – including Jon Hafer (keys/vocals) and drummer Charlie Heim – went on to play, by Jon’s account, “almost all the clubs in town,” including the Troc Balcony. Performing weekly for almost a year, they earned a reputation for an exciting live show and a reliable fan base. They knew “we [wouldn't] set the club on fire,” Zach says by way of explanation. After briefly disbanding in September, they reformed with Alicia Ritter and bassist Ryan Hyde.

The March Hare’s sound can be a bit hard to pin down – Alicia eventually stops to ask: “When you heard us, what bands did it remind you of?” Charlie, for one, readily compares Zack’s vocals to the hardcore act, The Blood Brothers. But the music can veer to the other extreme, in the more gentle harmonies of tracks like “In the Attic.” At other moments, metal basslines come face-to-face with pedal-distorted guitar solos. When writing songs, says Jon, “it’s whatever genre of music fits best for the idea we have. Our sound is constantly evolving.” They hope to record their latest material – about an album’s worth – some time this summer.

Friday’s show will be their first with the new lineup. Charlie warns: their live act can be uncompromising. “Either people would be really into us, or we’d play ‘Mr. Clean.’ People would say, ‘That’s too crazy,’ and they’d leave. There’s too much stuff going on, and they can’t dig it.” Challenging or not, the March Hare are seasoned enough artists to guarantee that every show will be unique. As Zack puts it: “We’re big on making it a performance.” 

tags: The March Hare, 34th Street
categories: press
Friday 03.23.07
Posted by Charlie Heim
 

How to be a Prog band without realizing it

Here's an old interview with The March Hare during which, among other things, we discover that their music drew on influences we'd never heard. At least some of us, anyway. 

An Afternoon Tea Party with The March Hare

On the first hot, sunny day of summer in the city, we sat down over some coffee and grilled veggies with the four bright-eyed and bushy-tailed members of The March Hare to find out more about their genre and ear-bending debut EP, People Dressed as People, where an experimental band finds a home (and a few shows to play) in Philly, and how a band can become prog-rock without actually listening to any. 

Four close friends, Zack Guy, Charlie Heim, Chrissy Tashjian, and Jon Hafer have combined their love of jazz with their propensity for wild rock’n'roll energy to create an album that refuses to conform to any sort of specific musical genre. It’s too musical to be hardcore and too noisy to be indie, the only two things it definitely is are interesting and loud. I had to ask: 

FO : Where do you feel like you fit in on the Philly music scene? 

MH : We can’t really find bands that sound like us. We have bands that we really like to play with like Chamomile, An Albatross, and the Sw!ms. Our audience tends to be a younger audience of people who like something new, something fun. We give so much at shows, our crowd is the crowd that’s ready to give that back. 
The music isn’t caustic to your ears - it’s not going to make you cringe, but you have to be ready for something new. Have to be open minded. Our crowd is definitely not the bar crowd. 

FO : What’s your songwriting process? 

MH : Someone brings in a skeleton or a riff they have floating around, then we fill in the rest as a band. Assembly Line was the first song we wrote together and it was from a skeleton that Chrissy had. Recently John was inspired to bring back a song of Zach’s that we’d put aside when he heard the poppy bass riff Chrissy played for it. 
No one person defines the sound of our music. Charlie is really into jazz theory so he fixes things and makes them more musical. He’ll tell us to add a harmony or say, “Try moving that one note.” 
Writing as a group we had to shatter our egos. You can start something, but you have to let the rest of the band fix it up. We’re trying to be conscious of dynamics and bounce things off of each other. It helps that we’re best friends when we’re telling each other to change key in a song or to take it back to the drawing board even when we thought it was done. 

FO : The record is very complex. Do you try to make your live shows reflect the album? 

MH : As much as possible. We only really change little things for fans who might be in the audience. Most of the time it’s the exact same song that’s on the album. 
We work some improv into the live songs to make them more alive. If you pay for a show, you want to see a show, so at first we were like, “Fuck musicality, we want to put on an energetic live show!” But we’ve grown more comfortable to where we can put on a show that is both good and crazy. 

FO : So we still can’t really define what kind of music the March Hare plays, but what kind of music do you listen to? 

MH : We all kind of listen to the same stuff but for different reasons, for instance we all love the Beatles. Charlie knows the most about jazz. None of us really listens to prog rock, but that’s what our music gets related to the most. It’s because of all the different sections in the songs, but those different sections represent the different personalities in the band. (laughing) We became a prog rock band without listening to prog rock. Except Chrissy, she was raised on Yes.

 

tags: The March Hare, interview
categories: press
Friday 05.26.06
Posted by Charlie Heim
 
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