University of California, Merced

06/22/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 06/22/2026 11:00

All-faculty Rock Band Cuts Album at UC Merced Recording Studio

An all-faculty rock band formed in a professor's garage a decade ago has released the first album produced at UC Merced's digitally advanced recording studio.

The album showcases the eight members of G Street Revolution. Their day jobs cross a spectrum of academics: engineering, sociology, mathematics, music and writing. The album, their first, is called "Dumpster Fire."

The recording studio is in the Arts and Computational Sciences Building, near rooms devoted to the Global Arts Studies Program. ACS has a film screening room, a dance studio, and spaces for student musicians.

Professor Jayson Beaster-Jones, a co-founder of G Street Revolution, said that every evening during the school year, ACS thrums with the energy of dance groups and bands as they go through their paces.

"This building at night is rocking," Beaster-Jones said. "It's very, very busy."

It was here that G Street Revolution logged about 10 weeks of recording and mixing, stretched over about a year, to complete "Dumpster Fire." Work on the album wrapped in April.

G Street Revolution - the name refers to a Merced thoroughfare and the spinning of vinyl records - has played live nearly 70 times in 10 years at venues around Merced County and in support of UC Merced events.

"Dumpster Fire," like the band, defies narrow categorization. One could start with "alternative rock," only because "alternative" allows whatever the band pours into it. Several G Streeters have roots in jazz and blues. They all lean into sophisticated arrangements and give every instrument a spotlight.

The album is full of chunky bass lines, swinging keyboards and a nimble-footed lead guitar. Professor Tea Lempiälä and Teaching Professor Paul Gibbons provide vocals as solo leads and in harmony.

Topping off the sound are the croons and barks of two saxophones. Yes, these rockers have horns.

"That's fairly unusual," Beaster-Jones said.

The lineup:

  • Beaster-Jones (saxophone), music professor

  • Gibbons (lead guitar, vocals), writing studies teaching professor

  • Lempiälä (vocals), management of complex systems professor

  • Arnold Kim (bass guitar), applied mathematics professor

  • Nella Van Dyke (trombone, percussion), sociology professor emeritus

  • Patricia Vergara (keyboard), ethnomusicology professor

  • Byron Webb (drums, vocals), Merritt Writing Program lecturer

  • Caleb Westby (saxophone), music technology lecturer

Colleges and universities are a rich source of all-faculty music groups. Questionable Authorities, a punk rock band, have head-banged in and around State University of New York-New Paltz since 2003. Christopher Newport University has the SEC Band (as in "School of Engineering and Computing") and Florida Gulf Coast University the Immokalee Road Band.

In 2015, Beaster-Jones and Gibbons were introduced to each other at a UC Merced faculty meeting. Soon after, Gibbons brought his guitar and Crate amp to Beaster-Jones' garage for a jam session. Things began to click. Webb, who had played with Gibbons in another band, was brought in as a drummer.

Webb, who teaches courses in academic writing, said playing in the band is like composing poetry. "I love bringing in songs I write to see what these great musicians can contribute to them," he said.

The band's first gig was in May 2016 at Lake Yosemite. Members came and went over the first few years, but the lineup has been largely stable since 2019, Beaster-Jones said.

Because of members' years of teaching and playing in classrooms and band rooms, rehearsals have a higher register than most bands are used to.

"For instance, Patricia has some of the best ears I've ever encountered," Westby said. "She'll drop something like, 'Hey, whoever's playing the flat nine on this chord, could they do a sharp 11?' Versus other rock bands where it's like, 'Hey, that sounded weird.'"

Creating "Dumpster Fire" satisfied several goals beyond being the first album recorded at the ACS studio. For the music academics in the band, it was a form of publication, similar to a book or research paper. It also preserved some of their original work, including songs written eight or nine years ago (usually, about 70% of the music at G Street shows is theirs, Beaster-Jones said).

There's also the joy of sharing their music more broadly. The album is available on popular services such as Spotify, Apple Music, Pandora and Amazon Music. That reach matters especially to Lempiälä, a native of Finland who has family and friends thousands of miles away. "For all the people who can't come and listen to us live, to be able to share it, well, that's wonderful," she said.

University of California, Merced published this content on June 22, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on June 22, 2026 at 17:00 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]