Arts, Dining & Entertainment

Outer Stylie to perform at the Clear River Tavern in Pittsfield 

Submitted Outer Stylie will performa t the Clear Tavern in Pittsfield on Friday, April 18.

Stop by the Clear River Tavern in Pittsfield this Friday, April 18, at 8 p.m. to catch Nate Martel and his four-piece psychedelic rock band Outer Stylie. If you can get there early, Space Mooves & The Cosmic Cows kick off the evening at 6 p.m.

Outer Stylie started in 2008 at UMass Amherst. Joining Martel (guitar/vocals) are Monte Arnstam (drums), John Duffy (drums), and Chris Ball (bass). They just released a single, “The Source,” available on every streaming service and YouTube. Outer Stylie has released three albums, but only one is streaming online, their 2016 release, “Puzzles.” 

For those attending Friday’s show, Martel set the  expectations of the band’s collection of psych-rock originals, where the vibe hands at the intersection of 1970s and 1990s boulevards with a right turn onto Presentville.

“It’s like if Black Sabbath meets Soundgarden meets Queens of the Stone Age. It’s heavy, not jammy,” said Martel. “We bridge the gap between heavy rock and jam rock.”

Although Outer Stylie’s home base is western Massachusetts, where they are annual staples at the Wormtown event and will be playing at this year’s StrangeCreek Campout Memorial Day weekend, Martel also does a solo show. He recently played at the Public House in Quechee.

“It was cool; it’s a fun little spot. It was snowing so it made the ride home a little difficult. It’s always snowing when I’m up there,” said Martel.

In addition to his solo shows and work with Outer Stylie, Martel also plays in a funk/soul/rock organ trio called Beast Mode, which will perform at Marigold in Brattleboro on May 8.

Juggling three different jobs is no sweat for Martel. Music is his full-time job, and all of his life experiences go into his songwriting.

 “It’s great to be doing something I love, most days of the week,” Martel said of his passion, which he’s been doing professionally since he was 16. “Music really connects everyone who listens to it. That connectivity is the purest art form to me. It’s great to be able to express myself doing that, doing what I love, and other people enjoy it too.”

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

 What’s in a name?

June 25, 2025
There’s nothing like a talk show to spark an idea for a column. Hosts Kelly Ripa and her husband, Mark Consuelos, recently discussed how people’s first names often serve as clues to the decade in which they were born. Some names that are rarely chosen today were popular in previous decades.  The given name that…

No patch left unskied

June 25, 2025
I’m calling it.   I drove around the long way, hoping to catch one last glimpse of the patch before we actually began hiking up into The Canyon. Partly because I wanted to see what I was getting into and partly because I wanted to make sure she was still there. I honestly wasn’t sure…

Pack up your troubles

June 25, 2025
The longest day of the year has officially come and gone, which means we are now on the slow, downhill slide toward winter.  Given that the days are currently long and the temperatures are nearing their peak, my family has opted for the traditional summer beach vacation. This is nothing new since we’ve rented a…

Life in a shell: eastern box turtle

June 25, 2025
As a budding naturalist growing up in the concrete-heavy environs of Boston, I would regularly thumb through my family’s collection of nature books and daydream about the creatures within. One species I was particularly drawn to was the eastern box turtle. These charismatic terrestrial turtles have high-domed shells festooned with colorful yellow or orange markings…