Cider Mag June 2015 Issue 50 | Page 7

T here is a little known spot that has been gaining attention in the local music scene. The Wreck Room is a game room, pub, and live music venue attached to La Mia Casa Restaurant in Peterborough, NH. Owned by Charles Ayala and family, The Wreck Room holds regular social events weekly for all ages: Reggae Night Wednesdays, Blues Jam Thursdays, and Metal Weekends to name a few. It has also been catering to bands playing anything from thrash metal, to blues and jam bands, and all genres of rock from New England and beyond. Not to mention the great selection of authentic New Jersey style pizza La Mia Casa offers, the food and beer on hand at The Wreck Room is sure to satisfy anyone’s palate. The Wreck Room event on May 23 invited three bands to perform a variety of rock music for a stellar show. The lineup consisted of Voices of The Dead out of Bennington, VT, Yeehaw Jihad of Nelson, NH and headliners from Keene, NH, Lobotomobile. Lobotomobile is made up of Laura Koons, who said, “I make music with my voice and with guitar,” as well as Matt Martel on kit and electronic drums. David Ciccone completes the three-piece on bass guitar. On Facebook they describe themselves as “an amorphous three-piece mashup of musical styles that pulls its inspiration from any damn place it pleases. Heavily steeped in horror movies, bizarre folk legends, video games, history, medical terminology, and broadway musicals, Lobotomobile creates genre bending music peppered with samples and electronics that continuously defies definition.” Lobotomobile creates mind-bending music that sometimes includes stage antics with a freak show feel. Now, add in some movie samples and electronic genre breaking sounds that defy defi- June• 2015 nition, making a live Lobotomobile show an utterly punkish metalistic Broadway musical, that’s in your face. Cider Mag was able to meet up with Lobotomobile beforehand, to sit in on their rehearsal and watch them write and prepare their setlist for the show that night at the Wreck Room. The darkened lair of their practice space is littered with remnants of stage props which seems to represent each of the members in their own demented way. CIDER MAG: Laura, what got you into music and at what age did you start performing? How did this lead you to Lobotomobile? Laura: Well, I was a theater kid always and I wanted to be like a Broadway performer, so I was real hardcore into the dancing scene and acting. I realized that music was a way that you could perform without having to audition for plays. So, it was kind of an avenue for that, and I came up here a few years ago and started doing open mics. CIDER MAG: David, how long have you been in the Keene area doing music? What other bands have you been involved with in the past? Lobotomobile: I’ve played drums for a band called Fuse and also for Skarma. I played guitar and bass for a band called Inverticrux for a short time. CIDER MAG: Matt what about you? Matt: I’ve only been in Keene for about five years. I’m originally from the Manchester and Concord areas. I’ve been into music since I was about 12. I’ve always played in bands on and off during high school, a bunch of garage metal bands, some alternative bands and I ended up moving out of my apartment and had to get rid cidermag.com • CIDER MAG • 7