The number one rule about Dock Street Fight Club: talk about it. While you’re at it, dance and sing along.

For Dock Street Fight Club, the group of young Islanders who play rock & roll covers and original songs, music is as much about their creative bonds as the community that they found while chasing it. Now, they’re following that thread across the country, playing at colleges and venues far past Island shores. The group is also releasing a new single on April 25, called “Hazy Love.” 

The four bandmembers, ages 21 to 24, all have their own Island ties and history. 

Their story started in 2017, when guitarist Emmett Athearn and then-bassist Sam Benjamin played together at the West Tisbury School as eighth graders. The pair were big fans of Nirvana and covered a few of their songs. They knew they needed a vocalist, so they reached out to their friend and classmate Atlas Zack. 

“We thought that Atlas looked like Kurt Cobain, so maybe he’d sound like Kurt Cobain…And it kind of worked,” Athearn said with a laugh. 

Atlas Zack with the band behind him. —Simon Strzepek

The group of three honed their sound, and Zack became interested in songwriting. It wasn’t until later that Zack started learning the guitar, which he now plays in their band along with lead vocals. 

When the young group attended the Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School, they played at a few Chilmark Potluck Jams. The up-Island open mic event is spearheaded by Alex Karalekas. Karalekas is a member of the Dock Dance Band, another band of Islanders who gave Dock Street Fight Club their spot performing on a local dock in the summers a few years ago. 

Zack said the Island community “does a great job with supporting young artists and new artists who want to share their music. And everyone’s very, very supportive of everything musical here.”

For young locals, the Dock Dance, held at the Chappy Ferry Dock in Edgartown, is one of the few places to dance and see live music before they’re 21 and are able to attend shows at various bars, like The Ritz Cafe in Oak Bluffs and The Port Hunter in Edgartown. 

It was kismet to the group that their first residency gig, taking the stage at Dock Dance and incorporating it into their band name as a result of the connection, was in the shoes of the Dock Dance Band, who they had listened to in their early years.

Dock Street Fight Club now draws huge crowds, especially younger locals who are able to see them perform at Dock Dance. The shows on their current tour have drawn even larger ones. Performing is a balancing act for the band, as each member has their own career outside of music as well. 

Dock Street Fight Club at the Ritz. —Simon Strzepek

Zack writes their original songs, is the lead vocalist, and plays the guitar. He’s also about to graduate as a pre-med student at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester and works as an EMT on the Vineyard. Emmett Athearn is the lead guitarist and owns an HVAC company. James Murray plays the drums and works at Mo’s Lunch in Oak Bluffs. Jack Holmes is the group’s bassist after Benjamin moved on to other projects. Holmes works in a neuroscience lab in Providence, R.I., researching Alzheimer’s when he’s not touring or performing with the band. 

The band recently got noticed by a management company called Beatline Productions, which propelled their music career forward. The owner of Beatline, Hunter Pope, is now the group’s manager and the tour they’re on now is a result of that partnership. 

“It’s great for the exposure,” Zack said of the tour. “We think that the music that we write can be pretty successful, if it’s done the right way. So I think it’s starting to get serious within the last year or so.”

Their new single, “Hazy Love,” was written by Zack. 

“I tend to write things that I find pretty catchy and repetitive — and hooks that get stuck in my head easily. I have a big influence from bands like The Strokes, Nirvana, and Her’s,” Zack said of his songwriting process. 

Dock Street Fight Club at Mardi Gras. —Matti Floyd

The first stop on their tour was New Orleans, La. this February. Last week, they hit Myrtle Beach in North Carolina. Then, they’re back on the Island in May to perform at local venues. Getting off the Island and driving to shows across the country is the first step of a long road ahead. 

The group said their chemistry as a band and their evolving sound has improved from the close quarters in their travels. Driving cross-country, sleeping in hotels, getting kicked out of a Waffle House at 5 am, and performing for strangers has brought the four of them closer together. Having the Island as a home base has helped them, too. 

“Having that shared background and spending that time on Martha’s Vineyard and in the Martha’s Vineyard music scene, the place where we grew up and where our love for music developed, I think that has actually really improved our cohesiveness and just made us a lot more of a unit,” Holmes, the band’s bassist, said. 

There’s two sides to the Vineyard coin for musicians. It’s a touchpoint for creativity of all types, where artists have lived for generations and uplifted each other as a result. The Dock Street Fight Club band named Mike Benjamin, Jeremy Berlin, Rose Guerin, Phil Darosa, Brad Tucker, and, of course, the Dock Dance Band, as just a few of the musicians who have paved the way and supported them. But the other side of that support is that the Island is separated from a lot of the mainland action. 

“Being surrounded by water kind of limits that exposure to the outside world. And although the community here is fantastic and very supportive, you need to break away from the Island if you want to be successful at a bigger stage,” Zack said. 

But he added that playing on the Vineyard means a lot to the group. The dock where they started instilled some small traditions for the band as well, such as Murray’s habit of drumming barefoot. 

“Whenever we have a home gig, it’s really nice to see 50-plus faces that we’ve known for years and who are very comfortable with our music. It makes us more comfortable,” Zack said.

Dock Street Fight Club will be performing weekly this summer at the Wharf, the Ritz Cafe, the Port Hunter, and the Town Bar & Grill. More information can be found on their website

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