Eclectic company: Chris Sexton, Domenico Lacala, Mac Esposito, Greg Lewis and Nicholas Mills are the Redfield Clipper Band.
Eclectic company: Chris Sexton, Domenico Lacala, Mac Esposito, Greg Lewis and Nicholas Mills are the Redfield Clipper Band.

Armed with hamsa symbols, shirts emblazoned with pot leaves and a melodica, the Redfield Clipper Band throws around metaphysical notions and profanities in the same breath, surrounding the quintet of 20-somethings with a nouveau Dazed and Confused vibe.

Formed in 2012, the five-piece band is assembled from current and former music students of the University of Nevada, Reno. Currently, the lineup consists of Mac โ€œthe Duke of Bluntsโ€ Esposito on the bass, Nicholas โ€œRedfield Clipperโ€ Mills on guitar, Domenico โ€œNicoโ€ Lacala on trumpet and keyboard, Chris โ€œC. Sex Moneyโ€ Sexton on piano, and Greg Lewis on the drums, with almost all of the group contributing vocally.

The groupโ€™s work is multi-dimensional in content and mercurial in sound. The groupโ€™s body of work ranges from funky and easily palatable to complex and cerebrally dissonant.

A self-described โ€œeclectic, hip-hop, jam band,โ€ the group radiates a distinctiveness that refuses to be readily packaged and shelved into one specific genre. Much of their music blends groovy bass lines with catchy hooks and edgy rap verses, while taking hazy detours through other styles like math rock and experimental jazz.

โ€œWe have everything to bring to the table,โ€ said Sexton. โ€œWeโ€™ve got at least one thing in our set that will appeal to anyone.โ€

But the members donโ€™t seem too concerned about becoming everyoneโ€™s cup of tea.

โ€œWhen Iโ€™m composing music, my intention is to get my message through my music to people like a slap in the face,โ€ said Esposito. โ€œI want people to wake up. And thatโ€™s what people do. They wake upโ€”or they leave the room. Itโ€™s always one or the other.โ€

The band is influenced by a myriad of musical sources, spanning an entire spectrum of styles, from Hiatus Kaiyote to 1970s film music, from Indian ragas to Kendrick Lamar.

But one of the biggest impacts on the bandโ€™s songwriting comes from a background in jazz, albeit more in a theoretical, abstract sense than in aural characteristics. It has emboldened and diversified their musical writing, instead of rigidly defining their work.

โ€œJazz isnโ€™t a boxed genre,โ€ says Mills. โ€œItโ€™s a medium. Itโ€™s a tool.โ€

Along with being in the Redfield Clipper Band, each member plays in at least one other ensemble, often in other groups that are strongly established in Reno, such as The Pretty Unknown, Bazooka Zoo and the Mark Sexton Band.

Being a part of the expanding output of creativity in Reno has been important for all of the band members as individuals.

โ€œThe music scene as a whole in Reno constantly has rising potential,โ€ said Lacala. โ€œThereโ€™s still bands from here that Iโ€™ve never heard of before. Itโ€™s the reason why I stay, even after I graduated.โ€

The Redfield Clipper Band provide its members with an outlet for more experimental ideas.

โ€œWhenever we play, itโ€™s from the heart,โ€ said Lewis. โ€œMusic is so important to us. โ€ฆ We all tap into something different when we write this music.โ€

In between a constant lineup of shows with their various groups, the group is in the midst of writing and recording.

In the last month, The band has just released its first single, created a new logo, and launched a successful GoFundMe campaign to raise funds for a music video that the band intends to premiere in conjunction with an upcoming EP release.

Now, the five are focused on maintaining that progress.

โ€œWeโ€™re leveling up our game,โ€ said Esposito. โ€œWeโ€™re really potent right now.โ€

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