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Marc Scibilia on stage. (Photo by Liz Brown, courtesy of Bullhorn Publicity)
Marc Scibilia on stage. (Photo by Liz Brown, courtesy of Bullhorn Publicity)

Marc Scibilia returns to WNY for April Iron Works gig

Tue, Apr 11th 2017 05:30 pm

Fresh from national TV and print campaigns, including a performance on NBC's "Today," Grand Island's Marc Scibilia will perform at 8 p.m. Tuesday, April 18, inside Buffalo's Iron Works, 49 Illinois St. Doors open at 7 p.m. for the all-ages show.

Click HERE for ticket information.

From arena shows to bar gigs, and major label albums to indie releases, Scibilia has done it all. A road warrior and genre-jumping singer/songwriter for more than a decade, he's hand-built his audience the old-school way: by writing songs that count, playing shows that matter, and rolling with the punches.

Born into a working-class family of Lebanese and Italian heritage, Scibilia left town a month after graduating high school, moving away from the Northeast and resettling in East Nashville.

His school guidance counselor had unknowingly set those wheels in motion several years earlier, when she sat down with Scibilia to talk about his future. Frustrated with his lack of conventional plans after graduation, she sarcastically asked him, "What are you going to do? Go to Nashville and write songs?" To the budding musician, that question sounded like a great idea, giving Scibilia the extra motivation he needed to head south. At 18 years old, he became one of the first members of his family - a family that includes several part-time musicians - to leave the Buffalo area.

Nashville - a town rooted not only in country music, but pop, rock, and dance, too - has become an appropriate home base for Scibilia's music. He doesn't limit his songwriting to one genre. Instead, he writes songs that spread themselves wide, mixing pop hooks, rock 'n' roll energy, and dark storytelling into the same pot. Taking cues from the artists he grew up with - including the Beastie Boys, Lauryn Hill and Bob Dylan - he sings about the greatness of ordinary life, filling his songs with regular characters who resembled Scibilia, his family and his friends.

He tours heavily, too, opening for everyone from James Bay to the Zac Brown Band. Every night, the audiences are different, but they all respond to Scibilia's music.

Eventually, his growing success earned him a record deal with Capitol/IRS Records. With Butch Walker serving as his producer, he recorded "Out of Style," a major-label debut album whose title hinted at the music's broad, multigenre appeal.

"I wanted it to feel like a mix-tape," Scibilia said.

The artists succeeded, creating an album that seemed poised to create just as much buzz as his cover of the Woody Guthrie song "This Land Is Your Land," which had appeared in the most Shazam-ed commercial of Super Bowl 2015. Then, one week after the album's release, the label closed and Scibilia was on his own once again.

Fortunately, Scibilia had always thrived on independence. Wholly in charge of his career once again, he began making new music at his own studio, embracing the freedom to record and release songs whenever he wanted. There was nothing standing in his way: no boardroom meetings in Nashville skyscrapers, no focus groups, no record executives weighing in on his marketability.

Even better, Scibilia's fans were just as supportive as ever, turning his cover of John Lennon's "Happy Xmas (War is Over)" - recorded as a duet with fellow songwriter and "Nashville" TV star Lennon Stella - into a viral smash. Released during the 2016 holiday season, the song racked up more than a million Spotify streams during the week before Christmas.

Scibilia kicked off 2017 with another viral hit, "Summer Clothes," a nostalgic single.

"I was 18 when I moved from Buffalo to Nashville, and my dad would call me once a week and end every conversation with, 'One more time, what's your address?' But he would never send me any mail," Scibilia said. "The song is a little bit about my hometown, my family, but mostly just someone looking for an excuse to call someone they miss."

Scibilia released the song as a double-sided single: the first featuring synthesizers, acoustic guitars, and drum loops, and the second fueled by a stripped-down combination of vocals and unplugged guitars. Then, while the song gathered steam on the Spotify and iTunes charts, Scibilia did what he's always done - continued writing and creating from his life experiences out on the road and at home in East Nashville.

Connect with Scibilia online at http://marcscibilia.com/.

Marc Scibilia (Photo by Sara Estensen, courtesy of Bullhorn Publicity) 

Marc Scibilia (Photo by Sara Estensen, courtesy of Bullhorn Publicity)

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