by Kate Hoos | Sep 13, 2022
Bikini Kill at Irving Plaza (photo by Kate Hoos)
Bikini Kill have announced the rescheduled dates from their summer 2022 tour which they were forced to cancel after Covid hit their touring party. Commencing in March 2023, the tour will begin in Nashville and see the band hit three weeks of dates in New England, Canada, and the Midwest. Tickets go on sale Friday September 16 at noon; see below for all dates and highlights from their recent NYC show at Irving Plaza.
Bikini Kill 2023 Tour:
3/30- Nashville, TN @ Marathon Music Works
4/1- Atlanta, GA @ The Eastern
4/3- Asheville, NC @ The Orange Peel
4/4- Silver Spring, MD @ The Fillmore Silver Spring
4/6- Silver Spring, MD @ The Fillmore Silver Spring
4/7- Philadelphia, PA @ Franklin Music Hall
4/9- Boston, MA @ Roadrunner
4/10- South Burlington, VT @ Higher Ground
4/12- Montreal, QB @ M Telus
4/13- Toronto, ON @ Danforth Music Hall
4/14- Toronto, ON @ Danforth Music Hall
4/16- Cleveland, OH @ Agora Theatre
4/17- Royal Oak, MI @ Royal Oak Music Theatre
4/19- Milwaukee, WI @ Miller High Life Theatre
4/20- St. Paul, MN @ Palace Theatre
4/23- Knoxville, TN @ The Mill & Mine
Bikini Kill at Irving Plaza July 2022
(photos by Kate Hoos; see full coverage)








by Kate Hoos | Sep 9, 2022
Nevva at Rippers (photo by Kate Hoos)
Summer is officially winding down but that’s not a reason to skip squeezing in a little more beach time. Especially when that beach time comes with some great bands playing a stone’s throw away. (For clarity’s sake, I despise the beach so do not actually go onto the sand or in the water, but I can’t resist great “beach adjacent” music so that classifies as a beach day for me.)
Rippers aka everyone’s “favorite beach burger shack” has been hosting beach front shows all summer and I sadly had not been able to make it down to any of them due to being insanely busy working a ton of other shows, but nothing like getting one in right under the wire. I had a magic early evening window in my schedule before I had to dash off to work another late night show in Manhattan so I took advantage of that and headed to the shore.
While there I was thrilled to take in the snarky sounds of Nevva, who if you didn’t already know, wrote one of the most iconic dis track/punk songs of all time, “Boyfriend’s Band.” Because truly, no one does give a fuck about your boyfriend’s band even if they did almost open for Fugazi.
Debbie Dopamine was up next, this being the new songwriting project of Katie Ortiz who has been part of several bands I’ve enjoyed over the last few years and really shows the depth of her songwriting (read our review of their debut EP, Pets). It was my first time seeing them and surely will not be my last.
Jelly Kelly took the third spot and brought their signature blend of indie and jangle pop to the evening, fuzzy bass and busy drums taking center stage. Unfortunately halfway through their set was when I had to start heading out and getting into work mode (so I missed the final band, Lost Children And Other Problems) but this was a very nice rock n roll oasis in a very busy time for me (and certainly better than the EDM show I found myself working after I left).
While Rippers will be continuing to do shows through this month, this will likely be my one and only stop there for 2022. But no worries, I’ll see them again next summer. I’m already looking forward to it <3

Scroll down for pics of the show (photos by Kate Hoos)
NEVVA
















DEBBIE DOPAMINE












JELLY KELLY















by Kate Hoos | Sep 9, 2022
Clockwise: Jawbox, Winter Wolf/The Dilators, Julien Baker, Man or Astro-Man? (photos by Kate Hoos)
What an incredible summer we just had…well if you don’t factor in that we’re still in a global pandemic, the stripping of reproductive rights, the climate crisis, police brutality, the war in Ukraine, the water crisis in Mississippi…alas, not to downplay any of that because it all totally sucks, but musically speaking, what an incredible summer we just had. I feel excited every day that live music is back in full force and that so many incredible shows have been going on. I am also beyond lucky to not only run this blog and get to see a lot of music because of that, but that I also work in live music so I’m at shows most nights of the week, getting paid to take all of this beauty in. Even when I’m not actively going out of my way to see a show—which I often am anyway—there I am and loving it. It especially always feels like I’ve won the lottery when I’m working shows of artists I love.
I was reflecting back over the last few months and thought it would be fun to have a highlight reel of sorts of the summer and the many shows I was at June through the “cultural end of summer” aka Labor Day and the week attached to it (mainly so I could squeeze a few shows I knew I was shooting or working this week under the deadline). I got to see a lot of incredible music either because I was there as a fan or I was selling their merch or handing out credentials in the box office and I think a playlist is the perfect way to relive some of it.
There were the big weeks—seeing Rage Against the Machine, Man or Astro-Man? and Julien Baker (twice) in the span of seven days—and the seemingly head scratching moments that are actually totally on brand for me aka skipping a free ticket to Phoebe Bridgers to go to a house show and saw my friends play adjacent to a kitchen instead. (I worked her two BRIC shows so I did in fact get to see most of her set BUT even without that still would have chosen the house show because you know I would have.) The surreal—the Union Pool fire happening mere hours after seeing friends play there. And the legendary and emotional—seeing The Messthetics, spending three powerful nights with Jawbox, and being at Sons of Kemet’s last NYC show.
From death metal shows in Quebec to reggae in Central Park to Punk Island in the 100 degree heat, and shows at the edge of The Atlantic Ocean in Rockaway Beach, from living rooms to arenas to parks and patios and everywhere in between, I had a grand summer of amazing music.
I was getting very excited to share some songs from these artists that I loved and then I thought why not include some of the shows the other contributors brought to FTA too? Because they brought a ton of great stuff to the table! Shows I wish I could have been at myself if only I could split myself into two—sometimes three—people a night. The hard part of this list too was picking only one song by all of these artists, the eternal struggle really. But all of these artists are deserving of your time so whether it’s a new artist to you, or a familiar song you’ve heard before, let them all serve as a gateway to some great musical exploration.
This playlist encompasses a very wide array of genres/styles and has plenty to dig into. So listen in order, skip around or put it on shuffle and see where it takes you. Most importantly, enjoy!
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/7jZSjnhtgjrmphGgpi5ZkV?si=V_YjlBghQEGiFn1lbBEZSw
Scroll down for pics from the summer:

7 Seconds (photo by Stephanie Augello)

95 Bulls (photo by Kate Hoos)

Amigo the Devil (photo by Kevin McGann)

Angel Olsen (photo by Kate Hoos)

Anysia Kym (photo by Juliette Boulay)

Avail (photo by Ray Rusinak)

Bass Drum of Death (photo by Kate Hoos)

Bat House (photo by Juliette Boulay)

The Beths (photo by Ray Rusinak)

Big Girl (photo by Juliette Boulay)

Bikini Kill (photo by Kate Hoos)

black midi (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)

Bodega (photo by Kate Hoos)

Boris (photo by Kate Hoos)

Burning Spear (photo by Stephanie Augello)

Camp Cope (photo by Ray Rusinak)

Circle Jerks (photo by Stephanie Augello)

Creek and Kills (photo by Kate Hoos)

cumgirl8 (photo by Kate Hoos)

Dead Tooth (photo by Kate Hoos)

Death Valley Girls (photo by Kate Hoos)

Debbie Dopamine (photo by Kate Hoos)

Depresión Tropical (photo by Kate Hoos)

Desert Sharks (photo by Jeanette D. Moses)

Dog Date (photo by Kate Hoos)

El Ten Eleven (photo by Kate Hoos)

Elway (photo by Ray Rusinak)

Flexi (photo by Kate Hoos)

Frankie and the Witch Fingers (photo by Kevin McGann)

Frank Turner (photo by Ray Rusinak)

Gun (photo by Kate Hoos)

Haybaby (photo by Jeanette D. Moses)

Horse Jumper of Love (photo by Juliette Boulay)

Introtyl (photo by Kate Hoos)

Jawbox (photo by Kate Hoos)

JessX (photo by Kate Hoos)

Jim Andralis and the Syntonics (photo by Kate Hoos)

Julien Baker (photo by Kate Hoos)

Kartel (photo by Kate Hoos)

Katy Kirby (photo by Edwina Hay)

The Kills (photo by Kate Hoos)

Kissed by an Animal (photo by Kate Hoos)

The Linda Lindas (photo by Ray Rusinak)

The Loneliers (photo by Kate Hoos)

Los Bitchos (photo by Kate Hoos)

Maafa (photo by Kate Hoos)

Man or Astro-Man? (photo by Kate Hoos)

The Messthetics (photo by Kate Hoos)

Motel Portrait (photo by Kate Hoos)

The Mountain Goats (photo by Edwina Hay)

Murder By Death (photo by Kevin McGann)

Negative Approach (photo by Stephanie Augello)

Nevva (photo by Kate Hoos)

Nihiloceros (photo by Kate Hoos)

Non Residents (photo by Kate Hoos)

Pancho Villa’s Skull (photo by Kate Hoos)

Pons (photo by Kevin McGann)

Posterboy 2000 (photo by Juliette Boulay)

Rage Against The Machine (photo by Kate Hoos)

Ratas En Zelo (photo by Kate Hoos)

Rebelmatic (photo by Kate Hoos)

Sadurn (photo by Juliette Boulay)

Sasami (photo by Kate Hoos)

Savak (photo by Kate Hoos)

Shadow Monster (photo by Kate Hoos)

Sharon Van Etten (photo by Kate Hoos)

Shilpa Ray (photo by Kate Hoos)

Shut Up (photo by Kate Hoos)

Sons of Kemet (photo by Kate Hoos)

Spite FuXXX (photo by Kate Hoos)

Spoon (photo by Kevin McGann)

Stuyedeyed (photo by Kevin McGann)

Sun Ra Arkestra (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)

Ted Leo (photo by Kate Hoos)

They Are Gutting a Body of Water (photo by Juliette Boulay)

Thus Love (photo by Juliette Boulay)

TVOD (photo by Kate Hoos)

Vacant Company (photo by Kate Hoos)

Venus Twins (photo by Kate Hoos)

Versus (photo by Kate Hoos)

The Wailers (photo by Stephanie Augello)

Weeping Icon (photo by Kevin McGann)

White Hills (photo by Kevin McGann)

Winter Wolf (photo by Kate Hoos)

World Sucks (photo by Kate Hoos)
by Kate Hoos | Aug 16, 2022
Rage Against the Machine at Madison Square Garden (photo by Kate Hoos)
For those who know me and even those who don’t who just happen to read this blog regularly, you’ll know an arena is just about the last place you can expect to find me seeing a show. So you can also imagine it would take a very special band to get me into that environment in the first place. Indeed, it did take a special band to make the stars align in such a way, but I knew that making it to see Rage Against the Machine was very important and something I was going to have to put aside my aversion to arena shows to make happen.
To be clear though, I almost didn’t go because despite loving RATM, I just absolutely loathe arena shows and have a mental wall that it’s just not a place I go to see music. Some may think I’m crazy, and maybe I am, but I consider it more that I’ve been spoiled for years in that I’ve been able to see so many bands I care so deeply about up close and personal in small venues so I don’t even want to bother when it’s in a large space. And for years I didn’t, sticking closely to DIY spaces and dive bars to get my musical fix. I have let go of that a lot in more recent years but the transition to larger spaces has been a trip for me to say the least; I’m still getting used to working in 1500plus cap venues, and shooting shows from photo pits, never mind an arena.

But my friend and co-photographer on this piece, Ellen Qbertplaya, talked some sense into me and convinced me to get over myself and get to the show. She was of course 100% right and I got a last minute ticket to the final show of their five day MSG run. And what a show to make an exception to my “I hate/don’t go to huge venues” rule for. I have listened to and loved RATM ever since first borrowing the CD and making a tape of the first album from a classmate in 1995, but they just never seemed like a band I’d ever get to see. First I was too young and then later when I was old enough, they were too broken up (and there was that whole arena disinclination thing I wasn’t yet over when they played previous reunions). Now all these years later, to be able to finally hear so many songs from their body of work performed live, it was truly something I didn’t know how badly I needed, hitting a place deep inside of me on an almost spiritual level.
I have always loved their 1992 self titled debut the most, and the tour being pushed back by the pandemic almost made it an anniversary tour of sorts. I listen to that album front to back all the time, finding inspiration in the anger, yet a sadness that so many of the issues addressed on it are not any better 30 years later and in some ways are worse. Birthed into a world just recovering from the 1992 LA Riots in response to the disgusting acquittal of the cops who savagely beat Rodney King, the band and that record in particular were so vital at the time, saying things that no one in the mainstream had the guts to say and at the volume that they said it. Unfortunately among other myriad issues, police brutality has only seemed to have gotten more brazen and out of control in the years since and as much as I don’t want to need Rage in 2022, we do still so badly need their voice now more than ever.

Rage Against the Machine (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
And as for the Rage of 2022, despite being three decades older and Zack de la Rocha’s injury earlier on the tour (revealed to be a torn achilles by friend of the band Glen E. Friedman), they were as incendiary and explosive on stage as ever. Even sitting down de la Rocha’s energy and power as a performer radiated off of the stage. During “Freedom” towards the end of the set he was so into it that he appeared to try to jump up before quickly sitting back down again. I can imagine for a performer of his caliber and intensity it must have been hard not to move all around the stage. Guitarist Tom Morello is one of the most innovative players of his generation and even in a room that big with 20,000 other people there, it was absolutely breathtaking to watch him play; I just marveled at being able to see him do things that no one else does or can. The funk fueled, air tight rhythm section of drummer Brad Wilk and bassist Tim Commerford were of course the bedrock holding up the fury of de la Rocha’s vocals and the fire of Morello’s guitar.
I stayed away from looking at setlists before I went but afterwards took a peek and they seem to have been structured fairly similarly across the five night run though some nights did have a few less songs. They played songs from across their three albums—1992’s self-titled, 1996’s Evil Empire and 1999’s The Battle of Los Angeles—making a good mix from across the catalog, though playing the most overall from the self titled record. “Bombtrack” fittingly kicked off the night and I knew I was going to get to hear the major hits from each album like “Bulls On Parade,” “Guerrilla Radio,” “Testify” and “Killing In the Name,” (which closed the show because what other song could?), and those are what got the most audience reaction. But I was very pleased to get to hear some of the album tracks too like “Down Rodeo,” and one of my all time favorites “Wake Up,” which they used to pay tribute to the many lives stolen by police violence, specifically naming Eric Garner, Breonna Taylor, Tamir Rice, Amadou Diallo, Fred Hampton, and concluding with “this song goes out to everyone who isn’t named, to those who haven’t been seen, murdered unarmed at the hands of the police in some corner of the world, when the cameras were off and we couldn’t see. This song is for them.”
While they did not play their Minor Threat cover from their 2000 covers album, Renegades (which of course I hoped for but didn’t actually expect them to do), they did hit their iconic Bruce Springsteen cover, “The Ghost of Tom Joad,” and a cover of “Close Your Eyes (And Count to Fuck)” by opening act, the hip hop group Run The Jewels, bringing the members on stage to perform with them. They really played just about everything I wanted to hear otherwise except perhaps “Revolver,” which appears to have been left off the tour sets other than as a partial intro, or “Fist Full of Steel” (which they did play on an earlier night) or the full run of “Township Rebellion,” which they instead used a shortened version of as a link track between “Freedom” and “Killing In The Name.”
“Close Your Eyes,” “Wake Up” on 8/14/22
I also loved the video screen, not only making it easier for a shorty like me to see, but the mix of live footage from the show as it happened and the politically charged images they used to emphasize the point of the songs really pushed things over the top visually. Always a band to stand by its principles and put its money where its mouth is, they also posted a graphic at the end of the night (and on their Instagram) stating “Charity tickets purchased by our fans for our five night Madison Square Garden residency raised $1,000,000. These funds will be distributed to the Immigrant Defense Project and by WhyHunger to Neighbors Together and The Campaign Against Hunger in New York City.” This follows several earlier donations on the tour totaling over 1.5 million dollars to various causes like abortion access funds, organizations fighting hunger, the Abolitionist Law Center and Detention Watch Network among others.

MSG exclusive poster
This five night run were the band’s last shows for a while as they have canceled their UK/European leg of the tour to allow de la Rocha time to heal from his injury and the next North American leg won’t commence until 2023 on the West Coast. And who knows if there will be more shows to come after the tour finally concludes as the band had not made any further announcements even before de la Rocha’s injury. Suffice it to say, I’m very glad I took the sage advice of a friend and did indeed get over myself because this was one of the best shows of my life even with it not being the ideal setting for me. (Hey, I know I’m never going to see Rage at a house show, but a middle-aged punk kid can dream!) The power of their music and their message transcended any and all obstacles— in my head or otherwise—and I am never going to forget this night.
Scroll down for fan shot videos, setlist and pics of the show (black and white photos by Kate Hoos, color photos by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Setlist: Bombtrack, People of the Sun, Bulls on Parade, Bullet in the Head, Testify, Take the Power Back, Close Your Eyes (And Count to Fuck) (Run The Jewels cover with RTJ), Wake Up, Guerrilla Radio, Down Rodeo, Vietnow, Know Your Enemy, Calm Like a Bomb, Sleep Now In The Fire, Born of a Broken Man, War Within a Breath, The Ghost of Tom Joad (Bruce Springsteen cover), Freedom, Township Rebellion (partial/used as link track), Killing In the Name
“Killing In the Name” 8/14/22
Full performance from 8/14/22 which featured a Run The Jewels cover/guest appearance
Full performance from 8/8/22 which featured a similar but slightly shorter setlist
RUN THE JEWELS


RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE















