Milkboy Philadelphia – That Music Magazine https://thatmusicmag.com Philadelphia Music News Fri, 05 Aug 2022 21:32:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0.9 Local Venue Spotlight: Milkboy Philadelphia https://thatmusicmag.com/local-venue-spotlight-milkboy-philadelphia/ https://thatmusicmag.com/local-venue-spotlight-milkboy-philadelphia/#respond Fri, 05 Aug 2022 21:32:20 +0000 http://thatmusicmag.com/?p=66679

Written by Angel Park

Milkboy Philadelphia is a live music venue, bar, and restaurant located amongst the hustle and bustle on Chestnut Street in Center City. The venue was opened in 2011 by co-owners Tommy Joyner and Jamie Lokoff and has since been the host to some locally and nationally recognized musicians.

Tommy has been involved in the music industry for over 20 years wearing many hats, including roles as a music producer, sound engineer, and even as a singer/guitarist in Pep Rally, his band. We had the chance to chat with him about the origins of Milkboy, its role in the Philadelphia music community, and precisely what Pep Rally’s latest single, “Turn the Radio Up” really means.

For Joyner, the concept of Milkboy began when he was barely a teenager, inspired by his early love of recording music. 

“The idea for Milkboy started as a recording studio,” He explains. “I’ve been interested in recording since I was 14 and started experimenting with track recorders around the same age. A few years later, I started recording my band and made tapes for us. And then other bands asked me to make tapes for them. I and some of the guys in my band ran it as a recording studio for years before we got into the venue side of things.”

Milkboy had a recording studio in Ardmore where various acts would come through the doors to record. The concept of utilizing its space as more than just a recording studio reared its head in 2006 after some talks with his business partner and co-founder, Jamie Lokoff.  

“In 2006, Jamie and I decided to open up a little coffee shop associated with Milkboy Recording (down the street), so we could start getting into the venue side of the business,” Joyner recalls. “We also learned we wanted to provide a stage for bands, widen our footprint in Philadelphia’s music scene, learn more about it, and meet more people. With what we do with recording, it was all about the studio and giving us better access to more musicians.”

Milkboy Studios added Milkboy Coffee until 2011 when Joyner and Lokoff decided to move it to Philly and convert it to a two-floor bar area with stage space, and it’s been that way ever since.

When it comes to getting talent through Milkboy’s doors, Joyner is no stranger to the process.

“We have relationships with different agents and bands locally and across the country,” Joyner explains. “We’ll have an agent reach out to us and say, ‘hey, we think you should book this band because they’re gonna be big in six months, etc.’ And from there, we decide if we can book the band within two months before the album comes out or after it comes out. We work out a deal that’s best for both parties.” 

But the real key to booking great shows -according to Joynerit’s about your network. 

“When it comes to finding new talent, It’s all about relationships, loving music, liking people and the different music pathways out there,” Joyner says.

 “Philadelphia music is a broad category,” Joyner quips, “There’s not just one genre dominating the city. For example, Philadelphia has a large gospel scene, hip-hop, R&B, and urban scene. But it also has this niche folk and indie rock scene, which you hear a lot of on, on stations like WXPN, which has been very influential in cultivating all of that.”

 In addition to the variety of music available in Philadelphia, Joyner also credits the community for being incredibly welcoming. 

“I think that we’re in many ways, we’re blessed because there’s a lot of quality artists in Philly,” Joyner explains, “And we don’t judge each other in Philadelphia by the color of our skin or the church that we worship or any of that stuff, we really judge each other by the contents of our record collection. Generally, there’s something for every genre fan here, and people find their groups in Philadelphia.” 

When he’s not busy booking shows to running Milkboy’s recording studio, Joyner writes music along with his bandmates in the group Pep Rally. 

“Pep Rally was a musical project that was a long time coming and has been with me for ages,” He states, “I’ve worked with so many other people on their records and never got around to finishing my own stuff.” 

As far as the inspiration behind the name itself? It’s all about feeling.

Tommy explains, “The name Pep Rally is really more a way to describe a feeling. What we’re trying to do with the band is have it feel like a fun time, which is good to listen to. Pep Rally’s music is really about fun and happiness and love.” 

On the subject of the band’s single “Turn the Radio Up,” Tommy said, “The song’s inspiration is from an idea about what would happen if everything was possible. Like what would life be like if you could do anything? It’s about the feeling of freedom. What if you could just grab the wheel and live life till you’re gone without all these kinds of day-to-day worries and concerns that we all have and without worrying about other people and what they think of you? I think you’d turn the radio up and drive around the world.”

 In addition to the studio and Chestnut Street’s venue, there is Milkboy South Street, where they host Open Mic every Monday night. During the summer, you can also go to The Oval XP on the parkway and check out the Milkboy Beer Garden.  

As for what’s next for Milkboy and Pep Rally? “We’re building out our show calendar for the upcoming fall and winter for Milkboy, so there’s a ton going on with that. And There’s more Pep Rally music coming out for sure! We released a second single, “South Street,” and are releasing a Remix for “Turn the Radio Up” by Klubjumpers in a couple of weeks, following our full-length album. We’re hoping to have it all completed by October.”

Milkboy Philadephia

Pep Rally on Spotify

Milkboy the Studio

Milkboy South Street

The Oval XP

 

 

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MilkBoy & Its Movement https://thatmusicmag.com/milkboy-and-its-movement/ https://thatmusicmag.com/milkboy-and-its-movement/#respond Wed, 13 Mar 2019 16:42:40 +0000 http://thatmusicmag.com/?p=57427

by Brittany RotondoContributing Writer

Philadelphia’s MilkBoy is a charming chameleon of the City’s backbone. The restaurant, café, bar and live music venue has had its fair share of attributes throughout the years, most notably in its humbled beginnings, founded by owners Tommy Joyner and Jamie Lokoff.

“To us, that means that we could take a risk eventually and it could go as professionals, which we did. It became caught up in what we thought it would,” explains Joyner about he and Lokoff’s partnership.

What started as a local recording studio in North Philly has turned into more than a brand, more than a business, and is gradually scaling the summit that is the entertainment and hospitality industries of Philadelphia and beyond.

Grammy-nominated MilkBoy the Studio (Located adjacent to Franklin Music Hall, formerly Electric Factory) offers premier recording spaces that have captured the sounds of artists spanning from Kanye West to James Taylor, Erykah Badu, and Miley Cyrus.

MilkBoy Recording offers four separate studios that specialize in customized mixing, monitoring and expertise. The SHAKE offers audio post for film, TV, web and sound design. They have earned 2 EMMYs, 4 CINEs, 10 ADDYs and 2 dozen TELLYs.

After relocating its original setting to Ardmore, then subsequently on to Center City, MilkBoy was officially born. Located at 11th and Chestnut, the two-floor building caters to resident foodies with a fully stacked food and beverage menu downstairs featuring the Hangover Burger and an endless list of draft IPAs. Live entertainment echoes upstairs, highlighting local and national touring musicians alike. See upcoming events here.


Milkboy Philly, 11th and Chestnut Streets

You keeping up?

The venue recently expanded onto the most infamous and interesting strip of Philadelphia: South Street (401 South St) The addition sees That Mag’s sponsored weekly open mic night amplifying with each passing week, cultivating to a greater audience.

The open mic, Homegrown Showcase, features local artists and musicians competing for the ultimate reward of a cash prize, a record contract with Milkboy Studios CDs/Printing from Mirror Image Media, Promotions through REC Philly and a publishing contract with Pint Publishing.


MilkBoy South Street

“It feels really good for us to be doing an open mic and working in this way to connect with artists who are not famous yet, as well as people that are well known,” explains Joyner. “The music, the connections. That’s why it’s been successful because there’s a lot of heart in it. It comes from the studio and how we started the whole thing.”

The battle royale takes place every Monday with a winner announced, each week, each month and finally, an ‘End of the Year’ full set showcase brings the frontrunners to a finale face-off.

“We make our open mic a little more exciting by setting it up in a way where there’s a standout performer each week. It’s low pressure, but we’ve got folks who are bringing their ‘A’ game,” says Joyner. “We’re looking to break an artist out of our market and out of Philadelphia. The talent is all over the map.”

On the addition of MilkBoy on South Street coming to fruition, “It’s very humble and the only normal bar on South Street! When I first moved to Philly, South Street was Philadelphia,” Joyner exclaims. “I lived at 4th and Monroe when all the venues kinda started to drift away. The opportunity came to take over the lease on that building and we were encouraged by some of the people in that neighborhood. It’s been very cool. It’s wild the stuff that we’re seeing. It’s fresh, it’s special. We’re excited!”

MilkBoy’s trademark seeps into neighboring avenues and continues to grow with a brand-new venue in College Park, Maryland. The empire has fathered three locations, and now the expansion to another state entirely at MilkBoy Arthouse. Say that five times fast. What sets this location apart from the rest, is the multitude of creative channels available within the setting itself.

“The reason it’s called MilkBoy Arthouse is that it’s in conjunction with the University of Maryland, we’ve partnered with them on the space. We’ve done art, dance, theater, it’s more overall artistic than just a music venue,” Joyner describes.


MilkBoy Arthouse, College Park, MD

Owners Joyner and Lokoff not only have dabbled into the local music scene, but they also have an agenda that includes sound design, audio production TV and film. Notably, the pair’s producer credits of Slow Learners, a romantic comedy the two conspired on, that has reached Sundance and the Tribeca Film Festival’s radar. Talk about a resume. Also in the works is another movie project, quietly under wraps. “We continue to push ourselves artistically,” Joyner states.

When asked if there’s more expansion in the future, without missing a beat, Joyner undoubtedly counters, “Definitely. We’re not done.”

Whether you want a Pharmacist cocktail, crabcake sliders, a kicking rock and roll show, a road trip or a simple cup of coffee, just follow the addresses in these lines. MilkBoy is forging a certain class of cool and keeps on cementing their name’s in a special place of Philadelphia history.

Photos by MilkBoy’s Sites.

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The Center City Jazz Fest https://thatmusicmag.com/the-center-city-jazz-fest/ https://thatmusicmag.com/the-center-city-jazz-fest/#respond Thu, 17 Apr 2014 19:27:59 +0000 http://www.thatmusicmag.com/?p=12634 by Dominique V. Richardson

A time for trumpets and saxophones, trombones and drum solos.

Saturday, April 19th marks the return of The 3rd Annual Center City Jazz Festival in Philadelphia. Bringing forth the creativity and community of yesteryear, the festival continues to reawaken the jazz scene almost forgotten.

With a line up of brimming talent that includes; Time Warfield Jr., Steve Coleman and Five Elements, Joanna Pascale, Justin Faulkner, Thumbscrew, Tomas Fujiwara, Stacy Dillard, John Raymond, Giovana Robinson, Tivon Pennicott, Peter Gaudioso, Ronnie Burrage, Miss Ida Blue, Charles Washington, Rhenda Fearrington, Mike Kennedy & The Kimmel Center’s Creative Music Program for Jazz.

“This is my dream festival lineup,” says Center City Jazz Festival director and trombonist Ernest Stuart.

The six-hour festival will play house with the streets of Sansom and Chestnut as well as Chris’s Jazz Café, Fergie’s Pub, Milkboy Philadelphia and Time Restaurant.

So, if you feel like ‘Funkin It Up’ with those who swim in creativity or you are looking for local artists, bands and musicians who talk the talk and walk the walk, the Center City Jazz Fest is where you need to be as it is sure to be not only an adventure, but intrinsically diverse with music and social interaction.

The Center City Jazz Festival came to fruition with the help of 188 individuals who contributed $17,200 to a Kickstarter campaign in 2011 and is a recipient of grants from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and Philadelphia Jazz Project.

“My goal is to create a scene that feels like it did years ago when jazz greats would come through Philly regularly, hanging and performing with local talent,” Stuart says. Expect artists to perform and socialize throughout the festival crawl with fellow musicians and audience members.

For tickets ($15 ADV|$20 ATD) and information visit www.ccjazzfest.com.

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