News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

THE STONE FOXES


BIO:
"They don’t smoke pot. They don’t stay up all that late, since they like to run in the morning. Do they drink? Hell, yes! But not to excess. If you’re looking to be a groupie, but don’t want it to interfere with your career or personal life, the Stone Foxes are an excellent choice. But they play like a dirty, dirty blues rock band, the kind that does things with underage girls and fishes and make for great biographies 50 years later. On stage, they swap instruments, switch lead singers, and sweat so much that they must have to replace equipment more regularly than Pete Townshend. I saw them rock out an audience of Google employees so hard that they all wound up on the stage. If they can do that to Google employees, imagine what they can do to people who aren’t so rich they can pay other people to dance for them. Shannon Koehler, who looks and acts a lot like Chris Pratt in Parks and Recreation, and his older brother Spence, grew up in Watts Valley. That's about an hour east of Fresno, which is about two and a half hours from anywhere you’d want to be. I know enough about rock bands to know that means that in the not-too-distant future, Shannon and Spence will hate each other. So enjoy the band while you can. Aaron Mort, who also coincidentally grew up in the Fresno foothills, met Spence in the dorms at San Francisco State. When Shannon moved up for college a few years later, the three formed The Stone Foxes. In 2011, they added Elliott Peltzman, who is probably the only person they ever met nicer and less threatening than they are. They played San Francisco constantly, writing their songs onstage as they played. They are the anti-YouTube sensations. The new album, Small Fires, finally gives them their own studio sound. The first song, Everybody Knows, sounds like the soundtrack to a very late night spent walking home alone, if you were a guy full of passion and turmoil and harmonicas; I’ll be surprised if Martin Scorsese doesn’t use it. It’s the kind of song you want to listen to a lot so you can get lost in it when you hear it live. For a band with such a distinctive sound, the album shows a lot of range. You could play So Much Better to get in the pants of your summer girlfriend, Small Fires when you’re full of rage at your parents for just not getting you, Goodnight Moon when you’re alone on the porch smoking pot wondering why you were so hard on your parents and didn’t take it slower with that nice girl you met last summer. Small Fires is as polished as they’ll ever be. You can even understand the lyrics. It still sounds dirty, but it’s a clean dirty. Kind of like the guys themselves. These are guys who worry about where to take girls on dates. For 50 years, guys have gotten into rock for the girls and drugs. The Stone Foxes might be the first band to get into rock for the rock. And you can hear all of that nice guy, Bay Area, liberal repression burst out on this album. It’s raw and bluesy. I don’t know where it comes from. But I get the feeling you have to know these guys a long time before you figure that out. " - Joel Stein "The four San Franciscans in The Stone Foxes have an energetic style that's rooted in swampy, foot-stomping blues-rock. Their freshly released sophomore album,Bears and Bulls, tackles ambitious arrangements with diverse moods ranging from acoustic twang to thunderous electric-guitar riffs." - NPR "In a time of laptops and drum machines, the roots-blues the band plays is a welcome change. Enthusiastic and talented, the Stone Foxes knocked it out of the park for the release of Bears & Bulls." - Relix "Mr. Hangman - The Stone Foxes...this ripping jam, a rant against the death penalty, is irresistible." - USA Today "Bears and Bulls, their latest release, rules...Catchy songs like 'Young Man' and 'Patience' will have you playin' air guitar in front of your mirror. Then they break it down to a very bluesy song 'Easy,' with so much emotion behind the arrangement and singing that it may provoke a tear." - San Francisco Chronicle "One wouldn't expect this NoCal quartet to outdo their self-titled debut but with Bears and Bulls they most assuredly have. Brimming with confidence, precision and enough scruff and git to make Mick Jagger smile, Bears and Bulls is a scuzzy, greasy, summer opus and just the kind of thing to keep this band on the national radar. If this doesn't turn some heads, what the f*ck will?" - Absolute Punk "The gutbucket six-string riffs and soulful shout-singing on tracks like "Stomp," "I Killed Robert Johnson," and "Little Red Rooster" show this band of twentysomethings has been pounding the old-time gospel — Stones, Zeppelin, Aerosmith — since kindergarten. In much the same way Jack White salvaged dinosaur guitar jams from the ashes of 1980s Arena Rawk excess, the Stone Foxes use these grooves to tell their own contemporary San Francisco stories." - The SF Weekly "Classic rock minded but sonically curious like modern boys tend to be, Bears & Bulls is one of the best records to slide across the JamBase desk this year." - JamBase

Latest Articles


The Stone Foxes Releases New Single 'Help Me Now' Photo The Stone Foxes Releases New Single 'Help Me Now'
by Michael Major - October 14, 2022

On The Other Side will be the first full-length album recorded by Shannon (lead vocals, drums, harmonica,  producer) and Spence (lead guitar, rhythm guitar, pedal steel, bass, producer) in over six years. For the Koehler brothers, On The Other Side is a cinematic western rock ‘n’ roll soundtrack to ...

The Stone Foxes Unleash New Track 'Time Is a Killer' Photo The Stone Foxes Unleash New Track 'Time Is a Killer'
by Michael Major - September 16, 2022

On The Other Side will be the first full-length album recorded by Shannon (lead vocals, drums, harmonica,  producer) and Spence (lead guitar, rhythm guitar, pedal steel, bass, producer) in over six years. The new single and album announcement coincides with the launch of a new fan club, The Fox Den....

The Stone Foxes Announce New LP 'On the Other Side' Photo The Stone Foxes Announce New LP 'On the Other Side'
by Michael Major - August 12, 2022

“Man’s Red Fire” sets the tone for an album with the band’s signature rock n’ roll sound, combined with heavy influences of Ennio Morricone and driving percussion. The recording features Ian McDonald (Farfisa keys), Elliott Peck and Zola (high-octave vocalists), Marcus Stephens (horns),  Mario Silva...

San Francisco Musicians Unite to Fight Homelessness Crisis with New Album 'Blanket Th Photo San Francisco Musicians Unite to Fight Homelessness Crisis with New Album 'Blanket The Homeless'
by Abigail Charpentier - October 31, 2019

The dire lack of affordable housing and a sharply rising inequity gap are driving San Francisco's homeless population to numbers not seen for 15 years with more than 8,000 people living on the city streets. Statewide, California has 129,972 homeless people (2018), the largest street population of an...












Videos

Recommended For You