BAR BAND

Brooklyn’s Hold Steady reveals their drinking inspiration

By Brian Heater

To anyone familiar with The Hold Steady’s first two records, it comes as no surprise that the Brooklyn band enjoys spending the occasional evening tossing back a spirit—or 10. Their gruffly spoken lyrics are a combination of old Twin Cities haunts, inside jokes and an eternal lament for the passing of that once mighty beast, the bar band. I spoke with guitarist Tad Kubler and frontman Craig Finn (out back, behind a bar) ahead of their Castle Clinton show, in order to get better acquainted with a few of the group’s favorite local watering holes in order to find out, once and for all, what it truly means to be a bar band.

Hi-Fi, 169 Ave. A

Finn: Galen [Polvika], our bass player, bartends here. Our old band, Lifter Puller, played one of the last shows at [Hi Fi’s former moniker] Brownies—we reunited for it because the club was so good. A lot of stuff leads back here. If I can make it, I always drink here.

Kubler: The jukebox is incredible, too.

Finn: If you can’t find something on there, you’re just an asshole. You’re just making shit up.


McFinn’s, 8 East 36th St.

Kubler: We were at an awesome bar last week called McFinn’s—which, his last name being Finn…

Finn: That place was pretty good; I’m not sure it was awesome. We were throwing them off a bit…

Kubler: The bartender was like, “You guys are in a band, aren’t you?”


Cherry Tavern, 441 East 6th St.

Kubler: I’ve never walked out of that place unscathed by some sort of situation.

Finn: That’s some serious drinking. A friend of mine was arguing that Hi Fi was a place to get fucked up. I don’t know about that. The Cherry Tavern’s one step up. No one’s going there for a social drink, I mean, it doesn’t even have windows.


Motor City Bar, 127 Ludlow St.

Kubler: The music’s always good. They have some sort of DJ situation but usually just some dude playing some Faces records.

Finn: In most places, a jukebox is always preferred over a DJ. There’s a “power  to the people” vibe.


South’s 273 Church St.

Finn: When we did Separation Sunday that was the nearest bar. Tad got bit by a dog over there.

Kubler: I was so drunk that I got halfway down the stairs before I realized anything had happened, and I was like, “I think something bit me.” I would get double Maker’s and ginger, and they’d bring it to me in a pint glass.


DC’s Tavern, 505 8th St., Hoboken

Kubler: The guy who drum techs for Bobby [Drake] on [the forthcoming Boys and Girls in America] is one of the owners of the place. It’s super small, and they’ve got a pool table in there, and it’s just tiny.

Finn: It’s the smallest bar I’ve ever been in. It’s like a small living room.

Kubler: It’s hardly big enough to put people in, let alone a functioning pool table. Great tunes. There’s a record player behind the bar, and you get to hear the whole side of an album.

The band’s third record, Boys and Girls in America, is coming to a jukebox near you this October. In the meantime—drink up.

July 27. Castle Clinton, 1 Bowling Green (Battery Park), 212-344-7220; 7, Free.

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