Nome Sane? is the hilariously entertaining, guitar driven, mostly instrumental brainchild of Teddy Kumpel. They combine roots music, psychedelia, compositional mystery and improvisation into a tight entertaining package that offers something for everyone.

what people are saying:

Nome Sane? Teddy Kumpel's tweaked virtuosity

RIC MOLINA FEB 3, 2023

A couple weeks ago I had the pleasure of catching Teddy Kumpel’s trio NOME SANE? At The Bitter End in NYC. It was Teddy’s birthday so the mood was high and these guys delivered in spades.

Teddy Kumpel is a well known, highly respected guitar wizard from Port Jefferson, LI which immediately makes him a homeboy, being from Long Island myself. I won’t belabor the issue or put a bunch of famous names in parentheses to give the man cred. All you have to do is look him up and you’ll get the pedigree but I suggest you grab a piece of the group’s latest release Kevin Wonders of the Squirrel, and give it a spin.

All original music and one inspired cover are on the menu and there’s a treat on every single track. Impeccably realized strangeness full of chops and humor runs through the entire experience with laugh out loud harmonic and melodic twists. Kumpel shows how truly masterful he is at weaving melodies never falling into displays or cliches unless they are ironically lined up against the wall and massacred. What a delight. 

Can we talk about touch? Teddy has been at it a long time; so relaxed and comfortable leading an elephant around the shop with a feather. Beautifully expressive whammy touches that never stray into wank remind me of Jeff Beck. Kumpel’s dynamic control is from full bloom fusillades of grey foam noise to delicate clean tings that drift around the room spelling unexpected Lydian colors and hidden chutes into the dark rooms of Nome Same?’s funhouse.

Bob Stander plays old school bass with a sound reminiscent of the best of the best when an SVT, Traynor or a Sunn Coloseum was in the basement. A charging and authoritative presence belies the fact that you can’t stop laughing at his antics. The voiceovers on Nome Sane?’s recording are weird AF, kinda like the best Firesign Theater bits, Cheech and Chong, Zappa, Beefhart, or Tom Waits. The live show is bent in the direction of self-effacing lunacy but don’t kid yourself, there’s a rabid intelligence behind the curtain and when it’s time to shred and soar Nome Sane? delivers in a shockingly good way. Unaffected and unique, there’s no science project math jazz here, no beer commercial shred-spooge and there’s nothing shy or polite in their bones. What a relief! 

The drums expertly commanded by Matt Miller are big, bombastic and booming without ever being showy. Miller’s groove is fat when it’s time to rock, finessed and lilting in the best Jamaican style and downright crushing in all kinds of over the bar line phrases and compound time signatures. Always organic and solid as a rock, the duo of Miller and Stander is a dream machine to any soloist or general space traveler. Teddy Kumpel deserves this kind of support but in all honestly it’s readily apparent that these goats are old homies who stand equally in the music and in their collective world view. 

In a time where conformity equals success, Nome Sane? serves up the antidote to being fed a load of horseshit passing for music. Categories and silos have nothing to do with imagination. These guys are living proof that the sound in your head is the only sound worth making.

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Nome Sane? Is an orgiastic ecstatic joyful experience that gives listeners permission to be their authentic selves! - Suzanne Jarvie

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‘Nome Sane? is an acquired taste and I’ve acquired it! - James Maddock

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NEW NOISE

Nome Sane? “Cringesome”

“Guitarist/composer Teddy Kumpel (Joe Jackson, Rickie Lee Jones) leads this trio, with Bob Stander on bass and Matt Miller on drums, on a far-reaching excursion through 12 stylistically diverse tracks. Teddy’s credo—“I strive for uniqueness that straddles melodic beauty and funky experimentation”—is front and center on tracks such as, “Cringesome,” which pivots between meters of 5/4, 9/8, and 7/4 with the effortlessness and precision of King Crimson’s Robert Fripp and Bill Bruford, while combining the sophistication of the Mahavishnu Orchestra with Tony Williams Lifetime-like grease. The inspired spontaneity at the heart of this record offers a lot for fans of rock, funk, fusion and unadulterated musical fearlessness.” Andy Aledort - Guitar World Magazine

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Guitar hero-worthy, for sure. Love the writing and the harmonies, the sonic colors and different vibes, and the overall pace. Your soloing is first-rate, as always, with lots of fresh, original ideas and a ton of terrific guitar sounds and personalities. Matt is the man, and Bob sounds great playing seeing-eye support bass with great tones (and if that’s his bass fuzz solo on Plastic Smile, very cool, I know he’s also a great guitarist). I especially dug Mask (the harmony), Porridge Storage (funk in 5), Fudgie (the extreme style mashup), Pimento Ano (thick with vibe), Pyonkle (that outro color change is magical!), and my favorite track is Doozy, so many Teddy-isms and a killer hook! Chris Jisi - Bass Player Magazine 

I am listening to your beautiful album. It's super creative and lovely sound. Well produced and one of my favorite tracks is I was talking about her cat!! It reminds me of an indian melodic scale called Raag Bhairav and then it transitions to another Raga. I love that.   who is speaking in I am not a shoe? the voice is superb. In Wrong Song the guitar slides are so beautiful I literally love that style of guitar playing. And in the second half of the song it goes in a different direction. Pretty creative!! Mouth Parole has great harmonies and awesome vocals. Cookie cutter has one of my favorite grove in the album!! This is just amazing! - Falu

upcoming shows

all NOME SANE? ‘s

records

including

Kevin Wonders of the Squirrel and TIME WILL SHINE

are available exclusively on Bandcamp, for now

NOME SANE? MISS DANCING

track 3 from the new album, TIME WILL SHINE

This pandemia song is about missing playing in a room together, and dancing weirdly in public with our friends.

 

NOME SANE? DOOZY

track 8 from the new album, TIME WILL SHINE

This song is about falling down the stairs, and getting back up. It's about how there are stumbling blocks in life and if you just delay the impulse a little it can make all the difference.

Nome Sane?.jpg

1st album - 1994

NOME SANE? - ‘nome sane?’

drums - Steven Wolf, Lee Finkelstein, Brian Dunne

bass - Tony Scherr

sax - Andy Middleton, Heinrich Von Kalnein

keys - Andy Ezrin, Greg Schleich

everything else - Teddy Kumpel

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visit the NOME SANE? zazzle store for some hot merch…

photo by Manish Gosalia