Creamery Station returns to Manchester
The two groups sharing the Jewel Music Venue stage on June 26 go together like Ben & Jerry’s Cherry Garcia and Phish Food — Not Fade Away Band celebrates the Grateful Dead’s music, while Creamery Station brings together all the elements loved by fans of the Dead, Allman Brothers and other heroes of the jam scene.
While plenty of performing units boast about coming together organically, it’s really true of Connecticut-based Creamery Station. Dylan Kader “grew up side stage” — watching his father Jim play in The Bernadettes, a regional R&B group. But Kader was more drawn to sports as a youngster.
In his teens, guided by a “big things start small” philosophy, Kader began honing his guitar skills.
“I wanted to get good enough to play around a campfire and have my friends smile,” he said in a recent phone interview, “but as soon as I started, I fell in love with it.”
One night at a house party, Kader, his dad and a drummer friend started jamming. Soon, the living room was packed with dancing revelers.
“It felt really right,” Kader said. “We got excited and started inviting other musicians.”
The first was his dad’s Bernadettes band mate Don DeStafano, a harmonica player who’d appeared on albums by Johnny Cash and B.B. King. Then Kader’s elementary school pal Harry Cooper joined on drums.
Crucially, keyboard player Jon Truelson, a Berklee grad with music theory skills, came on board. “He’s the Garth in our band — he really pulls our harmonies together, and has an ear like I’ve never heard,” Kader said. The group later welcomed percussionist Mike Ryan, bass player Alex Wu and Bobby Pickett, who plays lap steel and violin.
“It was almost a natural occurrence how everybody started coming together like that,” Kader said.
After hundreds of shows, some EPs and the 2017 demo collection Pastures of Plenty, Creamery Station put out its first proper studio album, Walk With Me, last year. Though the pandemic forced them to cancel a planned tour, Kader was sanguine.
“We had something to release at a time when so many bands were completely out of work with nothing to do,” he said. “So at least it gave us something.”
The new record’s dozen tracks reflect a collaborative nature. Kader wrote most, with Pickett, Cooper, Ryan and Truelson all contributing — Truelson’s harmony-rich “I’d Be Pleased” is a highlight.
“We’re lucky enough we have eight musicians and all of them are phenomenal,” Kader said. “Although not all of us end up starting the songs, we all have a big piece in the writing of them.”
Another standout is Kader’s “Fernwood,” written about a stop in Big Sur while the band was on tour in California. “We go out there a lot and we love it,” he said. “We were all just sitting around the fire and wrote the song about the whole trip — it was a fun little jig.”
Producer Vic Steffens (Rory Block, Lita Ford) did a great job of recreating the band’s live sound on Walk With Me, but the group is anxious to get back in front of fans to see how the new material evolves.
“I love bouncing back and forth between musicians, but there’s still a whole element that’s missing,” Kader said. “Things go to really cool and weird places on stage; that’s what makes it so special. A lot of it is driven by the energy of the audience, where the show and the night’s going down. So it’s really cool to get time on the road … playing the songs, and really see what comes of them.”
Not Fade Away Band w/ Creamery Station
When: Saturday, June 26, 7:30 p.m.
Where: Jewel Music Venue, 61 Canal St., Manchester
Tickets: $20 at jewel.ticketleap.com
Featured photo: Creamery Station. Courtesy photo.
