A well put line …

By Benjamin Joe

Photograph by Benjamin Joe

On left, Marc Edwards, the man of sound, stands next to Aaron Masters, the lyricist for “Liars to Poets” debut album “We Used To Live Here.”

Poets are notorious liars, as the saying goes, but there’s a reason for that. The truth hurts and sometimes the only avenue to get away from the brutal reality of life is to lie. 

The best liars have been spinning deception for the span of years and their lies become so seamless, so beautiful, we have to accept them as the only true things left. Thus Shakespear. 

Thus Byron. 

Thus Gorman.

Maybe that’s a little too dark, but the truth still stings. What’s wrong with enjoying a fantasy?

Aaron Masters and Marc Edwards have been playing for years in different bands around Buffalo and the surrounding area. Their paths have crossed a few times. They lived in the same neighborhoods – in different years.  They knew the same people. They even work in the same school district as teachers of science and special education, respectively.

Somehow the universe was edging them together. During COVID they found themselves living just a few houses away from eachother and a collaboration began. Edwards sampling and matching sounds to riffs and Masters arranging the whole and stamping his own lyrics on top.

“We Used To Live Here” is the debut album the duo have pasted and parceled together. A little edgy, a little arty, but all rhythm and intoxicating in this listener’s mind. 

The first track “Night on a Wire” starts off with sampling post-punk whispers and segments of words, reminiscent of Foo-Fighters and the Sweater Song from Weezer. But the hook isn’t far behind. It greets you in the morning and pulls you to work. Then it pulls you home and puts you into tortured dreams. … A banging first track that holds you tight in comatic warmth before letting the temperature drop and dumping the listener into the icy atmosphere.

The truth is cold, freezing ice water, and the best poem is the one that keeps you there until your eyeballs freeze.

The two guys are humble enough. They talk about the song and the experience of putting it, and the rest of the album, into the semblance of what can only be described as a piece of poetry.

The parceling and piecing mentioned always started with Edwards putting together all the sounds and samples and sending them off. Masters would then “take piece by piece and move them around like legos.”

“I would sit with the track for sometimes a couple of days, sometimes a couple of weeks and I would start working out parts and hooks,” Masters said.

“When we started really getting going with it, I would do something really out of the box, not something in our typical style,” Edwards continued. “And Aaron would send something back to me and it’d be catchy and make sense and it all flowed.

“I’d say, ‘well I guess I can press it even more’ and make it even more electronic and more out there!”

Masters and Edwards said they became more and more adept at their craft, to the point where the last few songs are done with almost no more of the editing that the two had become acquainted with during the production of their work.

As mentioned, both of the musicians started in local bands playing out in the local scene.

“Usually like classic rock to doom metal,” Edwards said. “To newer post-punk/metal. … what went over the best was probably the doom, sludge band. It drew the biggest crowds, but I had probably the least to do with it musically.”

“I’m all over the place,” Masters said. “I started singer songwriter stuff, I didn’t even pick up a guitar until I was 18. I got super into it, writing some verses and choruses.”

Masters said he still plays out with a cover-band which he said “Is always entertaining, but it’s kind of like we sold our souls.”

“After I was doing that for six months, Marc and I connected,” Masters continued. “He was like, you play guitar? I play guitar. You were in a band? I was in a band. Then we traded CDs ….”

True story? Possibly.

While Liars to Poets is not planning on playing their album out, the two are still wrapped up with the feeling that making something like poetry tends to bring about. Masters said music makes him “feel more whole,” and Edwards says not working on the album has left him “feeling empty.”

“My instinct is still to go downstairs and create something,” he said.

Check out “We Used To Live” on bandcamp at liarstopoets.bandcamp.com.

Pieroni dishes it out in upcoming album

by Benjamin Joe

Photo Submitted

Ellen Pieroni and the Encyclopedia of Soul will be putting out their first album, recorded in the last days of 2022. The collection of songs was the first time Pieroni had recorded her own compilations of rhythm, blues, jazz and funk in the studio and she did it with the backing of seasoned musicians as she played her saxophone.

Pieroni comes to bat on the album with a long history of musical doings, the first of which was with the Ellen Perioni Quartet in 2012 while attending Buffalo State for music education. 

Pieroni had been playing since she was eight and lived in Cheektowaga before coming to Buffalo for college. She followed up that experience with joining the illustrious Folkfaces of Buffalo-fame, as well as the Blues Stone Groove, in 2014.

“By that point I had been gigging pretty regularly around,” she said. “Then things kind of blew up with Folkfaces and that was my main project for a lot of years.”

Pieroni said she made a resolution in 2022 and that was to record her own music by the end of the year. With the help of Adam Bronstein on guitar, Tyler James on keys, James Benders on bass and Isaiah Gethers playing the drums; Pieroni’s unique aesthetic, as heard on tracks like “I Know That’s Right,” via YouTube is expected to come through.

Pieroni has played with many a group, but it should be known that this is a venture outside what she’s used to.


“The album with Folkfaces was pretty collaborative,” she said. “But they were mostly Tyler Wescot’s. They were his songs. This is the first album I’m composing.”

Pieroni cites long-lasting musical relationships with different members of the Encyclopedia of Soul, Bronstein and Benders in particular.


“We were in a band together called, ‘The Truth,’ but we’ve also played in town. I’ve known James since I was in 9th grade and Adam for over a decade. The three of us kind of had an idea to get together,” Pieroni said.


Pieroni calls the final collaboration, “an instrumental, soul band from the seventies.”

“The three of us got together and it sounded good so we got a drummer and a keyboardist to work with us,” she said.

The band eventually congealed around the five players. Pieroni said she didn’t know Gethers or James well before they joined, but once they started playing together, things just kind of clicked.

The album is going to be about seven or eight tracks, Pieroni said. It will be released on vinyl and five or six of the tracks will be originals.

“Then a couple of covers that we have our own interpretations of,” she said in late January. “We recorded it at GCR Audio right now it’s being mastered and mixed. It will be a few weeks before we start dropping singles, but it is on its way.”

Pieroni said she wanted to capture how the band was playing in a “snapshot” of music. 

The Encyclopedia of Soul can be found playing across Buffalo. The album is dropping on 3/31 at Sportsmen’s Tavern. More news can be found at https://linktr.ee/ellenpieronisax.