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The Incredible Sandwich: more than ham and cheese

The Niner Online

Jam Bands produce a style of music that is simple and relaxing, music that anyone can just chill out to when they listen. Jam Bands were popularized by such artist as the Grateful Dead or the Allman Brothers during the late 1960’s.

They are known for their improvisation to their music as well as the liberal cultural scene that is typically associated with them. Artists today like The String Cheese Incident, Disco Biscuits and Widespread Panic are currently some of the most notarized Jam Bands. The Incredible Sandwich is one of those bands that continue to bring that free spirited sound to a new generation of listeners.

Formed in the fall of 2007, The Incredible Sandwich is a Jam Band based out of Athens, G.A. “It’s a psychedelic, spacey, progressive rock jam sound,” said Matt McKinney, lead guitarist and a vocalist for the group.

The incredible Sandwich also consists of Kevin Juneau on bass guitar, Damian Kapcala on the keyboard, and Rackley Davis on drums as well as vocals.  Each of the members began playing music in their young teens, and Kapcala is even a classically trained on the piano.

The band has a wide range of influences ranging from Radiohead, The Grateful Dead and even European progressive rock.

“The fact that we share the same influences helps a lot with how we feed off each other. I think a lot of that goes into improvisation. We have a fine-tuned ear for each other’s instrument and style,” said Davis on the Band’s Myspace Account.

On April 25, 2009, their debut self titled EP was released. The five song EP even reached number 11 on Relix/JamBands.com. The Incredible Sandwich are currently in the process of recording their new full length album. “(Were) a few weeks away from finishing . . . (currently) figuring out the art work,” said McKinney. “Recording the stuff is almost over.”

Being based out of Athen’s G.A. has helped them greatly to the road of success. The band was even the winners of the “Upstart of the Year” award at the Athens Flagpole awards. The University of Georgia based out of Athens helps creates a town full of creative, artistic individuals.

The artistic community of Athens gives the opportunity for  local musicians as well as any type artist a supportive environment to showcase their talent. Acts such as R.E.M., Widespread Panic and Of Montréal are also based out Athens, G.A.  Their small independent record label, Mule Train Records, is based out of Athens as well.

The Incredible Sandwich are continuing to bring that easy going sound that help defined the late 1960’s to aged hippies, college kids and general music fans today.  If you wish to check out The Incredible Sandwich live, they will be coming to the Carolina’s via Charleston, playing at Halligan’s on Jan. 20.

- Devin Phillips, The Niner Online

Originally published 02/11/10

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Breezy Jazzy Rock with an Experimental Streak

Performer Magazine

Emerging onto the Athens music scene in 2008, the Incredible Sandwich have already met an overwhelming surge of popularity thanks to a prominent spot at Athens’ annual summer event, AthFest, and contagious word-of-mouth hype.

Much of this stems from their shows, where the quartet has already honed a tight performance with a stunning display of musical chemistry and chops.

Their highly melodic, unhurried approach to songwriting rightfully appeals to jam band fans, but unlike most neo-jam acts that seem to just meander, the Incredible Sandwich fuses bursts of funk and jazz, played with convincing dexterity and inflection, with straightforward, organic progressions and textures.

The result is jams that actually have drive – and what’s more, they show a band clearly educated in music theory.

Much of the Incredible Sandwich’s initial appeal rests upon guitarist/singer Matt McKinney, who snakes in and out of lithe, cascading solos and suave, syncopated rhythms. True, the prog/jazz-laced jam sound Phish pioneered rears its head all over the Incredible Sandwich’s EP –but, again, the band plays with such skill it’s hard not to enjoy it. The two-part “Bluebird”’s ambling, fluid arpeggios worm their way into your head with ease, even if the song doesn’t traverse much new ground. “Duck!” – while repetitive– sports a supple whiteboy-funk melody (this is a good thing) and closing ballad “Pleasant Depression” is simplistic yet undeniably touching.

But on “It’s Gone,” the album’s centerpiece, the Sandwich offers its clearest glimpse of new musical possibilities. Taking its time to open the floodgates, the 10-plus-minute epic cycles through everything from turbulent chromatic passages, to ambient drones, to heavy, gut-pummeling breakdowns to wide open, sunlit solos.

The only real weakness on display is McKinney’s vocals: his tone (think a Southern version of Umphrey’s McGee) is earnest but somehow flat, which belies the invigorating musical textures that course underneath.
—John Barrett

Originally Published:  December 2009 Issue —Southeast Edition

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The Incredible Sandwich Returns Home From Tour

The Red and Black

For such an incredulous moniker, The Incredible Sandwich has a casual take on music.

“I never wanted to be a rock star … I just wanted to write music,” lead vocalist Matt McKinney said.

While most bands spend many years trying to get signed, or at least get taken seriously in a music scene, The Incredible Sandwich has accomplished both in just a few. The band has found a way to connect with its fans through playing music for the experience, not the appearance, McKinney said.

“We’re not trying to impress you by wearing fancy clothes because we like to think that our music is good enough to keep you interested,” he said.

The Incredible Sandwich’s modest attitude has proven fruitful, resulting in a contract with Mule Train Records and a fall tour. After touring, Athens has become harder to play in as the band really wants to make a name for themselves at home, among a plethora of other bands doing the same.

“It’s definitely added pressure to really show up and put on a good show when we’re at home because [in Athens] there are so many eclectic bands, and just to distinguish yourself from them is painful enough.” McKinney said.

Around Athens, some people have come to know The Incredible Sandwich as a jam band – a category that most musicians see as a disguised insult, translated to mean lacking in structure.

“When somebody says ‘Oh, you’re a jam band,’ they’re pretty much just saying ‘Oh, you sound like Phish,’ or ‘Oh, you sound like Grateful Dead.’ And that is completely unfounded,” McKinney said. “We sound like the Incredible Sandwich – that’s what we sound like.”

Most likely, The Incredible Sandwich is stereotyped as a jam band because its music frequently features improvisation.

“If we play one song in our show where everybody improvises, all of the sudden we’re a hippie-jam-band, and we’re assumed to smoke pot and only play random stuff,” McKinney said. “It’s a sad stereotype because improvising with your instrument is one of the reasons you should play music as a band.”

The Incredible Sandwich has been on tour since mid-August and will be returning to Athens tonight. Rather than giving audiences a standard rock show, McKinney thinks that the live act is more an exhibition of his passion.

“I’ve always thought that people really weren’t ever coming to watch a show, but that they were coming to watch us express ourselves,” he said. “[Because] I’m selfish – I enjoy people being there, but I’m there for myself, using it as therapy.”

- Matt Evans

The Red and Black
Issue date: 9/18/09

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JamBase AthFest 2009 Review

JamBase.com

AthFest 2009 :: 06.26.09 – 06.28.09 :: Athens, GA

…I also made a short stop at Tasty World to check out local jam band Incredible Sandwich, winners of this year’s Athens Flagpole Music Award for “Best New Band” (given out on the eve of AthFest). This funky quartet takes strides towards the musical eclecticism of The String Cheese Incident, featuring a wizard-like command of the guitar by lead player Matt McKinney. A fun show always, “The Sandwich” simply needs a little more time to completely come into their own and find their sound.

Words by: Wesley Hodges

JamBase | Georgia Go See Live Music!
http://www.athfest.com/

Published on: 7/7/09

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Album Review: The Incredible Sandwich – Self-titled

Athens Blur Magazine

I like the metaphor of a band as a sandwich.  When you think about it, what is a sandwich?  Much like a song, or most definitely like a record, it’s a blank canvas of creative possibilities.  Combine all the bread, core and topping possibilities, and you don’t have to eat the same sandwich twice for a very long time.  Specifically, the metaphor works for this quartet of Athens youngsters, releasing their self-titled debut on Mule Train Records.  Like our endless sandwich combinations, the band runs the musical gamut in the confines of this 34-minute release, smoothly mixing styles on a winding road of peaks and valleys that never fails to entertain.  The virus that tends to kill “jam” bands is the noodling effect – jams that become four musicians doing four things on top of each other, akin to multiple conversations crammed in close confines, turning clear speech into little more than an unintelligible drone.  The antibody for such an affliction is subtlety and placement, and The Incredible Sandwich is a shining example.  They can play, no doubt.  That’s evident within the first minutes of any track on the EP.  What’s more impressive is the band’s collective knowledge of what not to play or, at the very least, knowing when not to overplay.  Much like a Miles Davis jazz record, or (if you like local examples), a Davis Causey guitar solo for Randall Bramblett’s band, The Sandwich attacks with a subtle dynamic that showcases musicianship and intelligence, separating them from a seemingly endless line of Teva-wearing, river-side Frisbee tossing jam rock.

- Alec Wooden, Executive Editor

Issue 8: June 2009
Athens Blur Magazine

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Sandwich Dreams Turn Out Incredible

Athens Banner-Herald

Many is the night Matt McKinney watched some of his favorite musicians perform their sets at the Georgia Theatre, with only a dream he and his colleagues in The Incredible Sandwich might one day be on that same stage.

That dream soon transitions into reality as “the Sandwich,” as it’s known by friends and fans, will play its first date at the august Theatre on Saturday to celebrate the release of its self-titled debut EP on Mule Train Records.

“It’s kind of surreal that we’ll actually be playing there,” says guitarist-vocalist McKinney, who will be joined by bandmates Rackley Davis (drums), Kevin Juneau (bass) and Damien Kapcala (keyboards) at the post-Twilight Criterium concert. “The Georgia Theatre is such a great venue, and we’re overwhelmed to be playing there.”

Together for approximately a year, The Incredible Sandwich has made quick progress with its friendly and familiar blend of rock, funk, jazz, Latin and jam-band sensibilities.

“A friend once described our sound as ‘genre-bending jam-based boogie,’ and we like that,” says McKinney, a Cordele native who earned a degree in music composition at Georgia Southern University before moving to Athens 18 months ago. “Sometimes I’ll write a pop song, or a rock song, or even a classical piece – I just try to keep myself out of the way of the music. People have been really responsive to what we’re doing, which says to me that they’re open-minded and willing to listen.”

The Incredible Sandwich began life as a trio, but McKinney says that the addition several months ago of Kapcala (a Maryland native who previously has played with Lost Cat, Sonic Boom, Lionz, Soul Patch, Betsy Franck and the Bareknuckle Band, Theolonius and Fiasco) helped the group move into a different realm.

The Incredible Sandwich has a packed schedule for the spring, with visits throughout the state and region.

“It’s like a dream – playing music on a constant basis,” McKinney says. And in days, the dream of the Georgia Theatre manifests itself, too.

“I don’t know that I ever thought I’d get the opportunity to play where so many great people have played. It’s kind of surreal to think you’ll be on the same stage,”McKinney says.

“I’m a Georgia boy, and so are Rackley and Kevin, so Athens is like a big city to us, and the Georgia Theatre is the place to play. I love Widespread Panic and Michael Houser, and I’m excited we’ll be playing in a place that has been so important to them. Once we get all set up, I’m going to take about an hour to let it all soak in so I can grasp what’s really happening.”

- Chris Starrs/ Correspondent

Originally published in the Athens Banner-Herald on Wednesday, April 22, 2009

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