Matt Zekala started writing songs on the playground when he was nine years old and eventually found his way to New York City, playing guitar for Dreamspeak in the 1980s. He went on to form Gravity in the 1990s with drummer Tom Kaelin, and was a founding member of Gent Treadly.

Matt has backed up a number of vocalists over the years, and also records and performs as a solo artist. He currently resides in Portland, Oregon, where he continues to play with Sean O'Brien in their acoustic trio, The Dirigible Brothers

Avram with Junior

Avram Lavinsky was born during the year of the snake in a movie theater on Manhattan’s Lower East Side about halfway through Zorba the Greek.  He was trained in violin under the Suzuki method at age four, utterly mastering “Hot Cross Buns” but was never able to pronounce the name of his teacher, Mrs. Wartley. It always came out “vuttley.”  However, his superior talent as a nay-sayer became apparent at a young age.  After dropping out of Stanford University to join Dreamspeak, Avram was offered an impromptu seat at the piano performing with Carlos Santana at Madison Square Garden, two record contracts, and a gig playing for President Bill Clinton during his second term. He said nay to all.

Willie grew up in Seacliff, New York; he currently lives in New Orleans, LA.

Doug was classically trained on piano and spent many years singing in his church choir.  He has perfect pitch and can play just about any instrument he puts his hand on.  Ask the band about the Geebah-tar.

He also learned about the power of political activism at a young age, accompanying his mother as she fought for women’s equality and choice.  So, Doug arrived at Columbia an experienced musician and fully politicized.  He gravitated to the Grafeful Dead scene and fellow Dead Heads.

He and Willie became close friends and constant jamming partners.  At a fateful jam in Luke’s room in the Columbia dorm McBain with Willie and Matt Luke handed him a Bass and set him on his path as a Bass player.  Columbia dorms would play a profound role in his life and the arc of dreamspeak.  Months later down the hall in McBain, Doug, Billy and Biily‘s HS buddy Jimmy Gannon, would pen the first two collaborative dreamspeak songs.

In the Spring of ’85, his suite in Hartley, the Russian Suite, would be the headquarters to the Blockade of Hamilton Hall, the protests to get Columbia to divest from South Africa.  That protest action was formative moment for what would be dreamspeak.  It informed the band with a sense of community and that the band and it’s music are connected to people and action.

After the semester ended Doug headed out to Long Island to form dreamspeak.  First playing as the backing band for Sean O’Brien’s group, Pure Instinct.  By the end of the summer, dreamspeak was a band and Doug was the bass player, a song writer and vocalist.

Following dreamspeak’s break up, Doug made his way to SF and then onto LA, where he played in many great bands.  He was a regular in the Kibbutz Room at Cantor’s, when that scene had some of LA’s hottest players as regulars.  He returned to college at UCLA and got his degree.  Then, went on to get his MBA from Anderson.  All the while continuing to jam regularly. 

He briefly formed the Jam Band Saturn Returns with old friend, Doug Grean and for that band wrote several collaborations with Billy, the first in many years.  They are currently working on a new tune.  When we are not in lock down, Doug gigs regularly with the always busy Rich Sheldon.  He looks forward to the next dreamspeak reunions in studio and on stage

Young love lead to young poetry.  By the time he arrived at Columbia in the Fall of 1984, he had a several years of trying to pour myself out onto the page.  Columbia and NYC in 1984 was a buzz with energy that fueled his further explorations of self and surroundings through writing poetry.

He made fast friends with simpatico folks at school and in the city at night, sometimes in day, as kids do.  On his dorm floor, 7th Floor McBain, diagonally across the air-shaft, was Luke’s room, fortuitous.  The most simpatico of folks were fellow Dead Heads, and Luke shared this tribal connection.  Luke had musical instruments and amplifiers in his room and he loved to jam. 

Luke’s room was frequented by several other musicians, who were mutual friends of Billy’s.  In the Fall of ’84, there was a jam, a special jam, in Luke’s room.  Willie, Doug and Matt played together.  In that jam, Luke handed Doug a bass guitar, and a bass player was born.  They jammed for a long time and there was a feel and a spirit to the jam that captured several imaginations, Billy’s among them.

Some months later, in the very end of ’84 or very early ’85, in Billy’s room on that same dorm floor, the first collaborative dreamspeak songs were written.  Doug, Billy and one of Billy’s friends from home, Jim Gannon, sat down one night and pulled a couple of poems out of Billy’s notebook and wrote “Twisted Trees” and “Crystaline Tapestry.”

Matt was off in Boston, but the Dead Head crew at Columbia was dreaming up dreamspeak.  Billy and Willie collaborated on their first songs.  Avram visited Columbia at some point and saw Willie and Doug jamming at night in the middle of Columbia campus.  They just plugged in and went for it.  Avram later immortalized the scene in “Golden Road”   “and they echoed through the buildings.  Pointed heads went spinning round.  Like a pair of smiling children.  Blue and gold came raining down.”

The intoxicating notion of having a band to play his songs became a singular focus for Billy and in the Spring of ’85, with the backdrop of the ongoing blockade of Hamilton Hall to protest the University’s investments in South Africa, Luke, Willie, Doug and Billy were actively talking about forming a band.   Luke always keeping Matt and Avram, his buddies from Rye, in the mix in the discussion.  Luke also kept Matt and Avram informed of the discussions.  Willie had reached out to his best friend growing up, Tom Kaelin, recruiting him to play drums.

Billy first met Tommy K at Delta Phi fraternity at Columbia in April of ‘85.  The frat house would become a base for the band and the fraternity a source support for dreamspeak.  There was one great demo recorded in the basement, many great shows in the basement and many wonderful times together in Delta Phi. 

Tommy was on Dead Tour and was passing through NYC from shows in Providence to shows in Philly.  They smoked a bowl and talked about the new band they were forming.  They agreed that they were starting with some great songs penned already.  They knew that wonderful espirit de corps of young people charging into a new adventure together.

Two months later in an office in San Francisco, Billy and Avram met for the first time.  They were both wearing ties.  Billy was working for his father’s ad agency and Avram had just come from a meeting.  They’d spend the next few days hanging out not getting into the Dead shows at the Greek Theater in Berkeley and bonding about the band they were forming.   Billy gave Avram the lyric to “Red Winged Blackbird,” their first collaboration.

Billy spent the summer working for his father and living on the top of Mt Tiburon in Marin.  The rest of the guys headed east and began figuring out how to be a band.  Inspired by living on the top of the mountain, dreaming of what might become through the magic of song and making music, Billy realized the band should be named dreamspeak.  He called the guys back in NY one day and told them the band’s name.  The band became. 

Billy returned to NY in the fall and returned to Columbia for his sophomore year.  Most of the guys dropped out of school to be in the band.  Billy being an off stage member remained in school, honoring his father’s wishes.  While he finished Columbia and graduated in the Spring of ’88, his passion and real focus was writing and the band.

David Graham would come to Columbia in fall of ’86.  David and Billy became close friends instantly.  Shortly after meeting David Graham, Billy lead David and a bunch of his fellow freshmen on an educational trip down to hear Kenny Gwynn play at the Inner Circle.  David Graham’s father the legendary promoter Bill Graham showed up to see how David was acclimating to college life in NYC. 

Billy and Bill struck up a conversation and formed an immediate bond.  Bill looked at Billy and said, “I haven’t met anyone like you in a decade.  You have the mania.  Welcome to my movie.”  Because dreamspeak was formed with the backdrop of the Blockade of Hamilton Hall, dreamspeak had mixed into its DNA a sense of social purpose, feeling of connection to protest and a mission to move people through music for common good, and to have a real good time!  This resonated with Bill who’s career was born out of the magic of the 1960s in san Francisco.

The years of the band were thrilling and drew Billy into the world of music.  When the band broke up in the end of ’89, Billy’s writing would slow to a trickle, but he continued to work in music.  In the fall of ’89 he had started booking and promoting shows at the 712 Club on W 125th St, which was a magical place and he had wild times there.  That place helped God Street Wine become. 

In the spring of ’90, Bill Graham offered Billy the opportunity to move to San Francisco and come work for him at BGP.  In May of 1990, Billy found himself in Carson, CA working Dead shows at Dominguez Hills. It would be a wonderful summer working for BGP at the Dead shows and then, working on the Mandela show at Oakland Stadium.   Billy spent an incredible year at BGP.  In addition to an amazing entrée into the wider world of the music business, perhaps the most consequential happening of that year was becoming romantically connected with Colleen Kennedy, who was the Head the BGP Box Office at the time. 

In the spring of ‘91 David Graham and another Delta Phi Brother, Tom Gruber, had started a music company, Music Unlimited.  David asked Billy to come back and work with them in NY.   Billy returned to NYC in May of  ‘91.  Music Unlimited was booking and managing Blues Traveler, The Authority, D’Trip, The Mad Hatters and The Dreyer Brothers.   Music Unlimited also produced shows at the Capitol Theatre in Portchester and produced the legendary Festival Season at Arrowhead Ranch in the Catskills. 

Bill Graham’s untimely death in October of ’91 would change the course of many lives.  Billy returned to San Francisco with David Graham to try to help him navigate what would come next.  In January of ’92, Colleen left BGP and started to work with Music Unlimited.  In the summer of ’92, Billy went out on the first HORDE Tour and coordinated the front of house venders, activists and performance artists.

In early ’93, David Graham decided to get out of the music business and closed down Music Unlimited.  So, Billy and Colleen decided to start Labyrynth as an artist management company in March of 1993.  Billy and Colleen still run Labyrynth.  For 27 years they’ve been working in Northern California in the music world managing and booking artists, producing and running large concerts, festivals and special events, booking and promoting many nightclubs, including Last Day Saloon, Blake’s in Berkeley, 19 Broadway and Uptown in Oakland.  Among other bands, they have managed and/or booked NRBQ, Jono Manson, The Mother Hips, Jambay, Steak, Sistas In The Pit and Felonious.   They produced the Bill Graham Menorah: Channukah in Union Square from ’97 to 2018. 

Colleen and Billy’s greatest collaborative endeavor is co-parenting their son, Daniel.  At eighteen, Daniel has grown up in and around shows and the biz.  He is a multi-instrumentalist, a song-writer, an audio engineer and producer, a video director and producer and the host and producer of his own podcast, Ready to Record.  He’s also a crackerjack Box Office IT Tech well know in the ticketing community as his mother’s son.

Labyrynth is a small company.  So, Colleen and Billy are often hired as key team members for bigger projects. by bigger companies.  In 2005, Colleen got hired to run the Box Office at Ironstone Amphitheatre in Calaveras County for the boutique promoter, Richter Entertainment Group.  She brought Billy as her assistant and 3 year old Daniel along for good measure.

Over the past 15 years, while maintaining Labyrynth, Billy and Colleen have helped to build REG.  Now, in addition to shows at Ironstone, Richter does shows in theaters, arenas and amphitheatres throughout CA.  Billy is now the VP of Richter Entertainment Group, while Colleen over sees Box Office for all shows in all venues. 

Recently, Billy has taken on an advisory role at Vezzit, a new start up Crowd Financing platform for creative projects.  He became involved in the project through one of the company’s founders Jonas Abney, a Delta Phi sibling.  Billy also finds himself in a Biz Dev and Sales role with Pantheon Podcasts, a new music podcast network.

Billy continues to write.  It had slowed to a trickle after dreamspeak’s active years ended in ’90.  However, after Bobby Sheehan’s death in ’99, Billy realized we don’t have forever and re-committed himself to writing.  He is not nearly as prolific as he was in his early days, but is filled with joy when he can collaborate on a song,  Most recently he’s begun writing songs with his son Daniel.  He has completed a screenplay, a collection of poetry and lyrics and is many many years into writing his first novel.  If he ever finishes it, he has plans for several other novels.  Next year he will put out another collection of poetry and lyrics on his 55th birthday.  He is working on new lyrics to collaborate with dreampseak band mates.  He is also deeply grateful that all these years later people remember the songs of dreamspeak, and that the guys are working on this website and other projects. 

He is looking forward!

After playing in dreamspeak Tommy had a 30+ year career in music. He played with Matt Z in the band Gravity on and off throughout much of the 90’s until Matt moved out west. And his friendship with Dave Graham and Tom Gruber from the dreamspeak era led to him joining The Hatters in early 93. They soon signed with Atlantic Records, released 3 albums and toured extensively (300+ shows a year). After The Hatters broke up he joined The Michael Parrish Band which led to his playing with folkfoot, The West Side All Stars and many years of great music with Michael. In the late 90’s he joined Gent Treadly with good friend Greg Koerner as well. With Gent Treadly he went on to back up Vince Welnick for about three years until his death in 2006 (150+ shows a year) and many others as well including Tom Constantine, Buddy Cage, Charles Neville, Garth Hudson, Mike Stern, Henry Butler and many others.

Tom has played on 35+ albums over the years with a wide variety of artists as well. And he released an EP of his own in 2020 called “Dreams, Pt. 1” which is available on all streaming services and features members of dreamspeak and other musical friends of Tom’s as well. Check it out! It can also be purchased here: https://tommykaelin.bandcamp.com The full album “Dreams” which is a look back at music from the dreamspeak era is coming soon.

Tom had a daughter in 2006 and backed off touring. In 2015 he and his wife started Nordic Candle where he works today. https://nordiccandle.com

You can here and see some of his music here on his YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIPnBrZMjSJtDKnIQ8Bo-RQ and maybe even subscribe.

Sean-O grew up in Glen Head, NY where he became friends with Willie and Tommy through the local Summer Theater Program. After returning from LeMoyne College with an English/Education Degree in 1985, Sean would play local bars in the duo "Pure Instinct", with Willie & Tommy occasionally sitting in. As the first dreamspeak rehearsals began, they brought Avram and Doug along as well. Once dreamspeak started performing Sean would sit in on the occasional cover, and the band started to learn some of his original songs. He took part in the band's winter 86 Northern California shows and joined the band full time shortly after their return to NY.

Following the break up of dreamspeak Sean-O moved to Albuquerque NM, where he formed Apricot Jam with Lewi Longmire and James Whiton. The trio, and their unique "psych-acoustic-organic-boogie rock" quickly became the biggest band in NM and started touring regionally. Remarkably Sean-O also managed to find time to further pursue his education . Receiving an MA in English Literature from the University of New Mexico in 1994.

In 1998 Apricot Jam relocated to Portland OR to be closer to the regional ,music scene they had thrived in while touring. That change spawned other changes among the members, and the band broke up in 1999.

Sean settled in Portland. Today he is married with two children, and serves as a Library Assistant for the Multnomah County Library. Sean still plays music and even gigs on occasion, including in the acoustic duo "The Dirigible Brothers" with Matt Zekala.

David’s involvement with dreamspeak could be said to have begun in Junior High School where he and Tommy met on the Student Council, when he was taking pictures of Willy & Tommy’s bands in High School, when he saw them back Sean’s duo (Pure Instinct) at a bar on Long Island with Doug & Avram, or when they played a party in his basement with Matt on August 3, 1985 - the first show they performed as dreamspeak.

What is certain is that David became the band’s first lighting tech at the beginning of 86, building the lighting board and lights from scratch. The band had made their first demo and even had a couple of clubs on Long Island and in Westchester that they could play regularly, but other than frat parties and the Inner Circle, NYC was largely tabula rasa. David took the list of clubs they had sent demos to and started making calls. One thing led to another and within a few months he was “promoted” from lighting guy to manager.

David saw the band from those first few small NYC club gigs to playing such well known venues as CBGBs & The Bottom Line, headlining some of the earliest sold out shows at Wetlands, a west coast tour, and headlining college festivals on the East Coast before he and the band parted ways in the summer of 1989. 

After a brief stint as a writer for Traffic Magazine, where he co-authored a regular column with Billy as well as co-authoring the first published interview with Blues Traveler and some other features, he opened his own company, Normanagement, where he managed The Melted Americans, briefly co-managed God Street Wine, and booked & operated the 712 Club. In 1992 David relocated to the Bay Area, where he started Straight Up! Management, managed Feed & Apricot Jam, booked Liquid Sunshine, was the booker for the Last Day Saloon & Club Boomerang, and provided occasional logistical support for The Mother Hips. David left the music business in 1996 to return to his “first love,” I.T.

Today David is back on the East Coast, where he manages the Network Broadcast Scheduling & Media team for ViacomCBS in New York. He lives in Jersey City, NJ with his dog Dobby, who arguably has the bigger Facebook following of the two.

Photographer Steve Eichner has always been right at the center of the action, zooming in on the passing parade of people and places that comes to life every night in the City That Never Sleeps. Since landing in New York City in 1986, Steve's captured blink-and-you-miss-it moments at both emerging and established hotspots, and taken on-the-fly shots of everyone from Lower East Side denizens to Met Gala glitterati, along with iconic formal portraits of A-list fashionistas like Lady Gaga, Cameron Diaz and Karl Lagerfeld. Equally at home on the red carpet and the back alleys behind a club, Steve comes armed with a slew of credentials as well as his arsenal of lenses. His years as house photographer for glitzy Club Kids night spots like Limelight and Palladium are showcased in his forthcoming book In the Limelight: The Visual Ecstasy of NYC Club Culture in the 90s. During his two-decade stint as staff photographer for Women's Wear Daily (1997-2016), Steve shot more than 40 New York Fashion Weeks, and his photos have appeared in a host of national publications, including Vogue, The New York Times, Newsweek, Time, Rolling Stone, People, Vanity Fair, Cosmopolitan, W Magazine, Details, and GQ. While Steve is a master at wielding the tools of his trade, what really makes his photos shine is his knack for capturing the essence of his subjects. It's a rare gift, built on trust. For unlike the paparazzi, Steve doesn't stalk his prey. He makes his camera become a mirror in which people can see themselves as they want to be.

In the Limelight: The Visual Ecstasy of NYC Nightlife in the 90s

Dive into the 1990s New York club scene with never-before-seen photos by its most prolific photographer, Steve Eichner.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/3791386816/ref=cm_sw_r_fm_api_i_ccjoFbQYXEM82?fbclid=IwAR0R-ywCptaSXrbgX_VUTxAXOyGlfIzyf1Nku0yxJsCOdwBZr1ca3VR3IJI

Gordon aka Nappy G aka G-Don arrived at Columbia in the fall of ’86 already an excellent percussionist committed to making music.  Always up for the jam, he quickly found his way onto the stage with dreamspeak, who were often playing on campus.  In the Spring of ’87, Gordon dropped out of Columbia, joined dreamspeak and moved to Long Island to live in the band house.  In addition to becoming part of dreamspeak as a band member, Gordon is one of the Ogres and wherever he is, he keeps the home fires burning for his brother Ogres.

In the Spring of ’89, Gordon left dreamspeak to find other musical adventure.  He quickly found himself a regular in the Giant Step Posse, and in 1990 helped form Groove Collective.  In 1993, Steely Dan Producer Gary Katz negotiated the band’s signing to Reprise Records.  The band would go on to chart with several singles and be nominated for a Grammy. 

Groove Collective's musical style reflected the wide-ranging backgrounds and interests of its individual members. Commenting on the group's 1996 release, We the People, critic Michael Casey referred to the numerous influences at work in Groove Collective's sound, specifically the presence of Afro-popLatin jazzhip-hop, and traditional jazz stylings. This mix is born of the members' varying influences, including bebopfunkold-school hip-hop and classic soul.[2

After many years in NYC, Nappy G now calls Hamburg, Germany home.   G is a producer, dj & long-time percussionist. A veteran frontman in his own right, Nappy G has shifted his energies & used his musical expertise to become a respected beatmaker & digital music composer, as well as video editor/director.

As a DJ, NAPPY G is known for his unique take on Latin rhythms & Afro-based sounds, flavored & accented by his deep history of Soul, Hiphop & Funk.

In 2011, he has created a new style of music that fuses these sounds & it’s called the “FUNKY PASSPORT” sound! This style brings together uptempo music (Tropicales, Latin House, Electro, Kuduro, Afro House, Bailefunk, Samba),mixes it with midtempo sounds (Moombahton,Funky Breaks,Bhangra,NuSoul), spices it up with rare traditional classic sounds from all over the globe (Reggae, Salsa, Cumbia, Souk, Rumba,Tropicalia, etc.) & turns up the heat with Global Hiphop from countries all over the world!

The FUNKY PASSPORT sound is feeding peoples’ souls & lighting up dancefloors everywhere NAPPY G plays

A founding off-stage member of the band, Luke made many of the posters, and was heavily involved in many of the recordings.

As Luke tells it...

"I grew up in a pretty little town called Rye, a suburb of New York City along the Long Island Sound.  In the fifth grade grade I had a lead in a school play called "The Homeland" that was written by two of the teachers.  The play had two casts, one with blonde hair, the other dark.  I played "Peter" in the blonde-haired cast, and Matt Zekala played him in the dark-haired cast.  We've been best friends ever since.

"In seventh grade Rye's three elementary schools fed into one high school/middle school, and I found myself in many classes with a quirky and challenging boy with the exotic name (it was easy to be exotic in homogeneous Rye) of Avram Lavinsky.  Avram soon became a close friend as well.

"When he was 15, Matt started taking guitar lessons, and within a few months had reached a level of proficiency I still haven't achieved after decades of trying. Avram was also playing music, mostly trumpet, but he also played enough piano that he was able to form a band called Crimson Rose with some other Rye High kids.  Crimson Rose was a Grateful Dead cover band, and they became wildly popular, packing bars full of excited fans before any of its members were old enough to drink.  Avram got a taste of the rockstar life, playing to packed rooms full of adoring fans every weekend.

"When I went off to college, I brought along an electric keyboard, with thoughts of putting together a band like Crimson Rose -- it looked fun!  One afternoon, early in freshman year, I was jamming with one of my roommates (a very talented guitarist/singer/songwriter named Christian Pschorr) when a skinny, nerdy kid I had met showed up unexpectedly at the door of my dorm room with a guitar and amp in hand.  "Mind if I sit in?" said  Willie Bonham.  I wasn't sure how I felt about that -- I was enjoying my jam with Christian -- but I didn't want to be rude, so I nodded ok.  Willie plugged in, tuned up, and started to play.

"HOLY SHIT!" Christian and I had been noodling along (in Christian's case, very competently) but Willie was at a whole other level.  It was like being in a room with Duane Allman or Carlos Santana -- he played with incredible passion, emotion, and dexterity, I'd never seen anything like it.

"During the summer of freshman year I had a nice, well-paying job as a programming intern at a New York City bank.  I made enough change to buy myself a neat little toy, a Yamaha MT44 4-track cassette deck recorder that allowed you to overdub tracks like a professional recording studio.  I played with it some, but one night Matt sat down and recorded an amazing composition with it called "Misty Morning Overdrive."  I was blown away, as was everybody else that heard it -- it was gorgeous.  

"Sophomore year, I moved into a dorm that mixed freshman with upper classmen.  During the first week, I walked around the hall and introduced myself to my new neighbors, which is how I wound up meeting Billy Cohen.  Billy was a poet and a dreamer, and we've been close friends ever since.

"Early in my sophomore year, I ran into Doug Haxall, who I had become friends with the previous year.  We discussed how we both dreamed about getting Willie into a band.  Willie was being courted by every musician on campus, and Doug and I realized that for a band to work Willie would need to think it was his idea, so we conspired together to make it happen.  Doug and I secretly practiced a few songs, so that one day we would all be hanging out together -- which we did often -- a "spontaneous" jam would happen, and Willie would insist that we all form a band.  It worked like a charm!  We formed a band (including a dramatic Korean guitarist named Jack Lee who has had a very successful career as a jazz guitaris) , and even played a few well-attended gigs.  (I remember playing a keyboard solo to a packed house in our dorm's lounge, and noticing a guy in the front row with his eyes closed playing Air Keyboards.  'That guy is pretending to be me!' I thought to myself, in amazement.)

"At one point that year, Matt (who was going to college in Connecticut) visited me at Columbia.  I had been telling Willie and Matt about each other for months, and we were all excited to see what it would sound like to hear them play together.  That night we had a jam in my dorm room, which I recorded on my trusty 4-track.  At one point Doug came over, was excited to jam, but all the guitars were being used.  (Doug has since learned to never go anywhere without an instrument! ;) ) I happened to have a bass guitar, so I plugged it in and handed it to Doug, who had never previously touched one.  Doug started playing, and the first notes he ever played on a bass sounded like he had been playing for years.  (We have it on tape!)

"Billy, the poet, began writing lyrics for both Doug and Willie, and the first songs in the Dreamspeak repertoire began to take shape, including Twisted Trees and Magic Dance.

"That spring, Avram (who was attending Stanford University) visited me at Columbia.  Late one night, he was at the Columbia campus when Matt, Willie, and Doug had a jam out on the steps.  He captured this moment in the song Golden Road: "The first time that I saw them, it was early in the morning, and they echoed through the buildings, pointed heads went spinning round."  Avram decided to drop out of Stanford and form a band.  He got in touch with Willie and Doug, who had decided to drop out of Columbia to do music (much to my chagrin!) and Dreamspeak was born. Needing a drummer, Willie called his high school friend "mBuzuki" Tommy Kaelin who was an amazing drummer.  They called Matt and tried to convince him to join, but Matt was unable to join full-time at the start, though he frequently showed up as a treasured guest, and eventually was able to join the band full-time in the summer of 1987.

"Willie and Tom had another friend from high school, singer Sean O'Brien who had his own band, Pure Instinct.  Sean began to make regular guest appearances with Dreamspeak, and soon his powerful voice and poignant songs were welcomed as he became a fulltime member of the band.

"In 1988 one last piece fell into place.  A young man from Kentucky named Gordon Clay showed up at Columbia, and put together a percussion group called Repercussions.  I convinced Gordon to let me play piano and synthesizer, and along with a guitar player named Brian we rehearsed and played a few shows -- including the biggest show I've ever played, opening for famed Washington DC GoGo band Trouble Funk in a big show at Columbia's Wollman auditorium.  Gordon sat in with Dreamspeak, everybody fell in love, and at the end of the year Gordon dropped out of Columbia and joined Dreamspeak full-time.  (At which point I stopped forming bands, since my best musicians kept quitting my bands and joining Avrams!)

"Yada yada yada...now I put this site together."

 

The Omni
Oakland, CA
Friday, December 19, 1986

Ruby's
Long Island, NY
Saturday, February 14, 1987

House party, live-mixed SBD/mic matrix recording.

Wolfgang’s
San Francisco, CA
Monday, December 29, 1986

Bill Graham's club in San Francisco, opening for Zero and Kingfish

Hunt's
Burlington, VT
Wednesday, August 26, 1987

The Right Track Inn
Freeport, NY
Friday, February 20, 1987

Pipeline Studios
NJ
Friday, April 1, 1988

Dreamspeak's vinyl-only studio album

  • Hobo Road (2:47)
  • Sparrow And The Crow4:14
  • Into The Sun (5:29)
  • World Away (3:44)
  • Zig 'N' Zack (4:52)
  • Crazy (5:08)
  • Lovesong (5:02)
  • Nasty Habits (6:50)
  • Take My Heart Away (2:43)

Tompkin's Square Park
New York, NY
Wednesday, September 21, 1988
gig photos - Click for Slideshow: 

Delta Phi
New York, NY
Sunday, July 31, 1988

On bandcamp.

Note that the picture is from a different show in the same spot, from a few years earlier

Columbia University
New York, NY
Saturday, April 23, 2089
gig photos - Click for Slideshow: 

Barnard Springfest
New York, NY
Friday, April 14, 1989
gig photos - Click for Slideshow: 

This is dreamspeak.com, a site dedicated to the band Dreamspeak that played in the New York area from 1985 to 1990, and then every so often after that.

Some things you can do:

  • Use the front page like a radio!  Every time you load the front page, a random streaming concert (or collection) shows up in the right-hand corner of the screen (or on mobile, at the bottom).  Click play and listen to whatever performance popped up!
  • Read up on any of the band members at their Bio pages - some tell pretty extensive stories
  • Listen to any of a number of recordings
  • Look at posters and other graphics on the Art page
  • View slideshows of photography, including press photos, concert shots, and candid pics on the Photos page
  • There are even some Videos

There's more to come, including ways that you can help add items to the band's rich history.  Stay tuned!

We haven't built out the contact form yet; when we do that will go here.

In the meantime, call or email Luke, or probably any of the band members (who will send you to Luke.)

Use the form below to submit content you think should be included, or to point out errors (be nice!) or make suggestions.

Stuff like

  • Photos
  • Recordings
  • Stories
  • Corrections
  • Links

You get the idea.  Eventually (perhaps soon) we'd like to make a more full-featured content submission process, but we're giving this a try for now.

If you think you'd like to do a lot of this, create an account and we'll put you to work! 

Doug chilling with a guitar at camp

Gordon "Nappy G" Clay, Jamming

Matt Zekala at Camp Dreamspeak