Too Many Zooz in concert: (from left) Matt "Doe" Muirhead, David "King of Sludge" Parks, and Leo P. This is WESA Arts, a weekly newsletter by Bill O'Driscoll providing in-depth reporting about the ...
A house and EDM band composed of a baritone saxophonist, a trumpeter and a drummer might be unexpected. Last Wednesday night at The Haunt, however, Too Many Zooz defied conventional musical ...
The rowdy sound of Too Many Zooz started in a place that matched the band’s spirit (and volume) note for note: the subways of New York City Leo Pellegrino, Matt Muirhead and David Parks started ...
U.S. District Judge John Padova granted Epic's motion for dismissal on seven of eight causes of action in the lawsuit filed by musician Leo Pellegrino, a Pittsburgh native who plays baritone sax in ...
In a way, the New York City subway system is kind of like Satyricon, Portland's legendary punk club. Take it from drummer David Parks, who's played both. "There's a certain randomness about the subway ...
Self-described as a “brass-house” trio, Too Many Zooz boasts an impressive sonic profile, with pop songs acclaimed by The FADER, a performance with Beyoncé at the 2016 Billboard Music Awards and an ...
PHILADELPHIA — Baritone saxophone Leo Pellegrino of the brass house group Too Many Zooz may pursue one count of his complaint against the maker of the video game “Fornite Battle Royale,” for copying ...
Too Many Zooz: (L-R) Leo P, The King of Sludge and Matt Doe Credit: Photo by Jeremy Shpizner, courtesy of Uppercut Management Too Many Zooz literally climbed from obscurity and stepped into the ...
Too Many Zooz have come a long way from their early days busking on subway platforms beneath the streets of Manhattan. The self-described “brass house” trio’s first video was a single-camera, ...
The video was posted to YouTube in January 2014. It is nine and a half minutes long. It has more than 3.1 million views. It opens in a busy New York City subway station, where three guys are standing ...
The setting: a subway station in New York City. The harried commuters rush for their trains before being arrested by a beautiful sound. But this isn’t the sweet serenity of “A Cricket in Times Square.