Classic Rock

The Moon City Masters

These harmonisin­g brothers are putting fun, sunshine and colour back into rock’n’roll.

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Meeting Jordan and Talor Steinberg is a little like meeting Bill and Ted. All megawatt smiles, lovable enthusiasm and glossy heads of hair, the 29-year-old twins from NYC exude the same Labrador-esque energy as the 80s film duo. The big difference is that while Bill and Ted’s band (Wyld Stallyns) were notoriousl­y poor, the Moon City Masters are quite the opposite. Not that this was always the case.

“Yeah, there’ve been a lot of bad gigs,” says Talor (guitar/vocals), “and we played in a lot of bad bands. You’ve got to write a lot of bad songs before you write some good ones.”

Singer/bassist brother Jordan adds: “Another way that I like to put that is, the first step to being awesome is being bad. But I guess when we first started playing we didn’t care.”

That spirit of freedom and enjoyment is at the heart of everything the Moon City Masters do. Since forming in 2018 they’ve cherry-picked tastes of the 60s, 70s and early 80s (Led Zeppelin, the Allmans, Humble Pie, Rush…) and stirred them into gleaming, sun-kissed vocal harmonies and hooks that feel fresh yet timeless. It’s music for discos and Stateside road trips. Singles Takin’ It Back and Over Now, along with their 2019 EP The Adventures Of The Moon City Masters, are good places to start.

“Talent is ten percent of the journey,” says Talor, “and it takes a while to figure out your strong points and figure out who you are as a band. I feel like in the last two years we’ve really figured out who we are.”

Raised in suburban New York City, the twins were introduced to their father’s records early on (“he was a kid of the sixties, he went to Woodstock…”). As teenagers they fell in love with the heaviness and lyrics of bands like Rainbow, Iron Maiden and Black Sabbath, spurred on by tips from their big brother, the internet and… their bus driver.

“He was a total metalhead,” Jordan recalls. “We were playing in his band when we were fourteen – we played CBGBs with him – and he would bring bags of burnt CDs – UFO, Thin Lizzy, Rainbow, Gary Moore…”

From there the brothers moved through a succession of rock, metal and progressiv­e rock groups, none of which went anywhere. By 2018 they’d decided to strike out on their own. They fleshed out their sound with producer Justin Craig, and honed their colourful, gleefully retro look with the aid of Talor’s fiance Maris Jones – an artist who’d done commercial campaigns for Gucci, and Joe Biden For President, among others.

“She’s our Roger Dean,” Talor enthuses. “She loves all the same stuff as us; she’s a huge Humble Pie, Free and Grand Funk Railroad fan. She loves The Grey Whistle Test and Top Of The Pops.”

All the while they’ve sustained themselves financiall­y as guitar teachers. Pre-pandemic they also played weddings, alongside regular gigs. Right now they’re releasing new singles every six weeks, with more activity poised tentativel­y on the horizon.

In the meantime, in these uncertain times their nostalgic, Technicolo­r dream world offers a happy escape. “We love it,” Jordan says, grinning. “We really feel with everything we’ve done with this band, this is who we are.”

Get release updates, merch and more at mooncityma­sters.com

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“When Coverdale and Hughes joined Deep Purple, that really inspired us when we were young,” Jordan says. Like: ‘Woah, a band that has two lead singers with really great harmony.’ Coverdale and Hughes brought a bit of soul to the band, too, which we’re really into. We like to have funk- and soulinspir­ed rock music.”
FOR FANS OF... “When Coverdale and Hughes joined Deep Purple, that really inspired us when we were young,” Jordan says. Like: ‘Woah, a band that has two lead singers with really great harmony.’ Coverdale and Hughes brought a bit of soul to the band, too, which we’re really into. We like to have funk- and soulinspir­ed rock music.”

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