Happy International Lefthanders Day

Happy International Lefthanders Day

Ned Flanders from the Simpsons knew what was up! Now where the hell is my left-handed can opener?!? (Note: while there are no lefties in the lineup, there is in fact a Ned Flanders themed metal, or ahem “Nedal,” band, Okilly Dokilly, that is worth checking out)

 

International Lefthanders Day is one of those cheeky- probably made up- weird holidays that not many people know about, unless you’re a dorky lefty which….. why hello there, this is me! Being that it is currently this joyous day, and I myself am a lefty musician, I thought it would be fun to give a shout out to some of my favorite lefty artists which is what happens when you let me be the editor in chief of a blog, ha! These artists range a wide gamut of styles, some I know personally, some are legends, some are indie faves. But I love all of them and the music they create(d) so wanted to make a little list to show my appreciation. The only criteria is you gotta play lefty- being left handed but playing a righty guitar doesn’t count nor does open handed drumming.

 

On the subject of lefty drummers, try playing drums full lefty for 25 years, this is the NUMBER ONE comment you will get “but have you tried playing open handed?” which 99.9% of the time comes from the mouth of a man. See a recent tweet of mine for my opinion on being asked THAT. I list it on my band’s stage plot to NOT change the drums around because sound techs are sometimes very confused as to what is happening when I set up. I also sass Fender on Instagram every year for their one day a year focus on lefty guitarists while ignoring us the rest of the time and barely making anything available in lefty models; it’s really tradition at this point!

 

So while FTA is not in fact turning into a listicle site, this was fun and I liked putting it together. All of these artists are people I love and respect and for the ones in the more DIY realm, or who are/were lesser known, I absolutely recommend checking them out. You probably already know who that Kurt guy is though….

 

 

Kurt Cobain

Kurt Cobain of Nirvana circa late 1993 on the In Utero tour (photo by Kevin Mazur)

 

I know, I know, maybe it’s cliche to include this, but I don’t care. Kurt Cobain’s music has meant so much to me over the years and I still very distinctly remember the time period around his death which was heavy for a young kid to navigate. In the years afterwards, I taught myself to play guitar and it was very hard to find a lefty chord chart (and no YouTube at the time) so I would look at pictures of him playing to match what his fret hand was doing and that really helped a lot. I am sadly just a shade too young to have seen them play live- I was a week shy of 13 at the time of KC’s death- and I obviously wouldn’t have been taking pics of them at 10 or 11 years old, never mind going to their shows. So instead I chose this image because it was, and still is, one of my favorites of Kurt; it really just is so stirring to look at even now, almost 30 years later.

 

Not to make this too much of a rant, but I would be remiss if I didn’t also mention that I was DEEPLY angered by the announcement of a “new” Nirvana track made by AI a few months ago (that was also disgustingly and disgracefully announced on the anniversary of his death). FTA was still under construction at the time so I didn’t get to fully elaborate on it….I may eventually…but suffice it to say that I really wish that people would stop continuously circling like vultures and picking his bones (and that goes for the other artists who were graverobbed as part of this project, the members of the so called “27 Club”). The man fucking died by suicide in large part over this type of shit, and the industry has continued to exploit his ghost for decades since; I don’t need to have known the man personally to know that he’d absolutely be spinning in his grave over this.

 

The project “The Lost Tapes of the 27 Club” claims to have a focus on “mental health” but here is the real catch: “In addition to raising awareness about mental health resources, Over the Bridge hopes the project emphasizes exactly how much work goes into creating AI music” and there it is, the REAL reason, the big tech money stench all over it. Plain as day, the true purpose becomes clear, which is to suck the marrow of the bones of dead artists who made legendary music and to use that to push their tech agenda to commodify everything, increase surveillance of our habits, and wipe humans completely out of the picture.

 

The truly bizarre part of this all being that how can you even entertain removing people from one of one of the most amazing elements of being human in the first place- the ability to express ourselves through art and music? It’s gross, there is really no other way to put it, it’s just plain gross and so unbelievably arrogant and disrespectful to the artists that were effectively artistically body snatched to make this happen. And on the subject of them also exploiting mental health as a cause, as I tweeted at the time, Nothing says ‘we care about you and your mental health’ like saying ‘eh whatever, we can just get a computer to copy your music for profit after you’re gone’

 

Portrait of Dick Dale

The King of the Surf Guitar, Dick Dale (I have seen this photo many times over the years but have not seen it credited to anyone, I will amend if/when I find out)

 

I admit, I also get a little angsty when I talk about Dick Dale. Not because I don’t love him, I do, but because I really feel he never got the respect he deserved in life and still hasn’t in death. He was a Grammy Award winning artist who early in his career pushed the limits of what was then possible for electric amplification along with Leo Fender, and in part gave us some of the robust amp technology we have today. Oh and in the process of all that, he also invented an entire genre of music too- that being surf music. Yes surf may be a bit of niche genre, but it is one that none-the-less has influenced many other people. Surf music and his songs specifically have found their way into pop culture again and again over the decades- from the surf craze of the 1960s (NO the Beach Boys are NOT a surf band, I said what I said), to the classic “Miserlou” being featured first in Pulp Fiction in 1994 (trust me, this is likely where you know the song from), to that same song being sampled by the Black Eyed Peas, for their 2006 song, “Pump It.”

 

Sounds like an impressive enough resume right? Well apparently not since many people I talk to don’t seem to know who he is and he has never been even nominated by the Rock N Roll Hall of Fame, never mind inducted. And to make matters worse, everytime I have seen “Miserlou,” come up in a show or movie where I have had the closed captioning on, it is always credited to the Black Eyed Peas. He was very sick at the end of his life but had to continue to tour to make a living almost to the very end because he just wasn’t making the money you’d think an artist with his resume should have been. That was so sad to me. I was so bummed when he died and knowing all the rest of his story too and how he’d been slighted again and again over the years by the industry.

 

He was a pioneer and is a legend who should be recognized for his contributions to music and pop culture, but the “establishment” seems content on ignoring him completely. I got to see him perform probably around 2005 and he was already in his late sixties by then but still put on an incredible and energetic performance that rivaled that of someone half his age. I feel fortunate I got to see him then and I still have a custom pick he gave me that night super glued to my Stratocaster. I did photograph the night but I have to dig through some old hard drives to find them but will share it when I eventually get to that.

 

I really hope the “establishment,” whoever they are, finally wakes up soon and gives him the respect in death they never bothered to give him in life.

 

Guitar pick with Dick Dale's name and logo on it

My Strat which I have played many awesome gigs with. (Don’t mind the dust!)

 

Jimi Hendrix performing

Jimi Hendrix performing in the late 1960s (I am a bad history of photography student since I don’t know who took that photo but I will amend when I find out). This is one of my favorite music related photographs of all time.

 

I absolutely can not have a post about legendary lefty musicians without mentioning Jimi Hendrix, I mean come on, who could? What rock music fan has looked at the above photo and not heard “Purple Haze,” playing right out of the image or thought “damn I wish I could have seen THAT live”??? I’d wager not very many. We all know that his life was tragically cut way too short, but his influence is still felt so strongly today in the rock world, it’s like he’s still alive, somehow in the ether….there but we just can’t see him. Punk, heavy metal, noise rock, grunge, etc etc etc, tell me any of these genres could have existed without his influence? I really don’t believe that they could.

 

Sadly he was also recently graverobbed by the same AI abomination that the rest of the “27 Club” was, but I have refused to listen to any of the songs that came out of that. I won’t indulge or encourage such disgusting disrespect for artists who quite literally changed the face of music and expanded the realm of what was possible. No computer could ever EVER hope to replicate otherworldly talent like those artists had and shame on any tech bro led company that could think something so downright blasphemous.

 

 

Kurt Cobain performing

A rare image of Kurt Cobain playing a Telecaster, a guitar he was not known to use very often. (photo by unknown)

 

 

Alright, now that we’ve talked about a few absolute titans, let’s move onto some really rad people I know from my years in the music scene, a few bigger indie artists, and a few artists that are legends in their own right that I have not met personally but that I admire.

 

Sean Padilla of The Cocker Spaniels performing

Sean Padilla of The Cocker Spaniels (photo by Erin Fox)

 

A masterfully funny wordsmith, a genre defying song writer, and the world’s best Dad, Padilla has just released the first new Cocker Spaniels album in several years, the wonderful The Cocker Spaniels Are Still Alive and So Are You (read our review) and in fact the album came out TODAY. What better way to celebrate International Lefthanders Day than by downloading this gem? Really hoping that they will play in NYC (or close by) sometime soon so I can finally get to see them live since sadly I have never been able to.

 

Tim Fogarty of El Ten Eleven performing

 

Tim Fogarty of El Ten Eleven (photo by Kate Hoos)

 

Drummers who play “full” lefty (as in the whole kit is set up “backwards” and not just open handed on a righty kit), we are a rare breed, so I always get very excited when I see another lefty out there. I have been a BIG fan of ETE for many years and try to always see them whenever they make it over to NYC to play and I took this photo in 2019 when they played at Music Hall of Williamsburg. Since then they’ve released a triple album Tautology, and are currently at work on a new double album. They will return to Brooklyn early next year and you can count on me being in the audience when they do.

 

Jawbreaker performing

Blake Schwarzenbach of Jawbreaker (photo by Kate Hoos)

 

I don’t have a cool story about how I got into Jawbreaker, I found them on MTV, that’s it. Not going to lie and say I magically saw them at Gilman in 92 when visiting a fake older cousin who snuck me in or anything, it was definitely on MTV. And while I never got to see them play during their first run and was aware of them for about five minutes before they broke up, I did discover them in the 90s at least. Back then, my world was smaller since I was a kid who didn’t have internet access (the web was also a much smaller place at that time anyway and there was no digital social media), and I had a limited amount of places I could go in the early to mid 90s; I couldn’t go to shows (and didn’t really know where any where happening anyway) but I did have a portal into the world and that was through music magazines and late night MTV.

 

It was watching 120 Minutes one night late in 1995 that I came across Jawbreaker and seeing a lefty guitarist on screen definitely made me perk up. I ended up really enjoying the song and wrote down the name of the band, song, and album as one did in those days. I had never heard anything quite like them at the time so I saved up my extra lunch money and made my way to a cd store (probably in the mall) and bought a copy of Dear You. I immediately loved the album and became obsessed with it for several years to come. I had no idea til much later that there was any drama surrounding the band or the album or them signing to DGC or opening for Nirvana, none of it really. I just knew I had a cool cd by a mysterious (at least they were to me) and awesome sounding band that none of my friends knew about that ended up breaking up not long after I got the album. I used to write a little piece about them in every issue of my high school zine too; I was in deep for a few years there!

 

Over the years I did get to see Blake play in both Jets To Brazil (need to dig out those 35mm negatives) and forgetters, but nothing was really going to do it for me until I saw Jawbreaker. I really never thought I’d get that chance until all of a sudden they re-united in 2017 and 2018. Those tickets sold out in a flash and I was really bummed to miss out, but figured I’d eventually get to a show at some point, I was definitely not ready to lose hope. And it worked out because a year later I did get to see them and I was able to much more easily get tickets. Honestly looking back now too, I’m glad I missed the insane rush for the initial shows because it was a lot less crowded and intense so more enjoyable overall because I could fully engage with the songs in my own way. I was able to see them twice on that 2019 tour and shot both shows which was an absolute dream come true for me as a fan and as a photographer. It has been unclear ever since if they will write and record new music, but here’s hoping that they do.

 

 

Kathy Foster of The Thermals performing

Kathy Foster of The Thermals (photo by unknown)

 

I admit I had a bit of a love-hate relationship with this band over the years as sometimes some of the music blurred together for me because honestly it could get a little repetitive, but it really was more down to singer/guitarist Hutch Harris being rude to me at a show once. That being said, not Kathy Foster’s fault she was in a band with someone who thought it was cool to be rude to fans, but hey maybe he was having an off night, I don’t know and it was at least ten years ago or more now. They did have a handful of really fun and catchy songs over the years so if I boil the band down to those strongest songs, and forget certain members personalities, they still hold up as solid to me now. Foster has played with several other bands, most notably All Girl Summer Fun Band, and gone on to do some really cool stuff after The Thermals too.

 

Dave Diem of Lapeche performing

Dave Diem of LAPÊCHE (photo by Kate Hoos)

 

LAPÊCHE are seriously some of the nicest folks I know and I love their band, Dave especially always has such warmth and positivity whenever I talk to him (there is also a slight chance we may be very distant cousins on my mom’s side, though we aren’t sure, but decided to pretend it’s true). We initially connected over social media and then I first got to see them at the end of 2019 when they opened for J. Robbins at Saint Vitus (I covered that for Brooklyn Vegan which you can see here). I had a slight cold that night and remember walking in grumpy, but I definitely felt 1,000 times better after their set and getting to meet and talk to them, all grumpiness firmly faded away.

 

Right as the world was shutting down in 2020, one of their shows was the very last indoor show I saw, and if memory serves correctly, they were one of the very first indoor (or otherwise) shows I saw again as things started inching back earlier this year. I really love their sound and was so thrilled to be invited to work on their press photos with them for their wonderful new album Blood In The Water, which is one of my favorites of 2021. They’ve got some exciting touring plans coming up for later this year and I have all my fingers and toes crossed that things stay solid enough for all of that and more to come true for them. I’ll for sure be at whatever shows I’m able to.

 

 

WORLDSUCKS performing at a house show

Mark Worldsucks (photo by Kate Hoos)

 

Mark is one of the heaviest shredders I know and also one of the most passionate musicians in my personal sphere of friends. He is always so supportive of all of my projects and is constantly thinking of ways to get us involved on shows together and I know he is this way with many other folks too. WORLDSUCKS is one of the most unflinchingly political bands I know and absolutely live by the ethos of “loud fast and pissed,” making music that reflects that. A dedicated metal head, he also hosts Thrastherpiece Theater on RadioNope every Tuesday night. See more pics from a recent show they played that was one of the best I’ve been to in a long time.

 

Barbara Lynn performing in 2008

Barbara Lynn performing in 2008 (photo by Masahiro Sumori via Wikipedia)

 

Unfortunately Barbara Lynn is someone who I was not aware of til more recently. A pioneering performer in the 1960s, a Black woman writing all her own music, leading her own band, and calling all the shots at a time when a lot of people really DID NOT want that to happen. She performed and recorded throughout the 60s and has some epic soul/blues/rock albums from that time period, with her best known song being the soulful “You’ll Lose A Good Thing.” Her song “I’m a Good Woman,” was sampled and interpolated by Moby in 2002 on his song “Another Woman.” She Shreds featured her in this 2018 article on lefty guitarists.

 

 

 

Elizabeth Cotten (photo by unknown)

 

Elizabeth Cotten is another guitarist I sadly did not know about until really the last ten years (she is also featured in the above She Shreds article). She has an interesting story in that she worked for many years outside of the music world and didn’t begin recording and performing to wider audiences until she was almost 60 years old when she was discovered by the Seeger Family. Her unique style- dubbed “Cotten pickin”- which came in part from playing an upside down right handed guitar, still continues to influence finger picking today.

 

 

 

Katy Otto performing in 2016

Katy Otto of Trophy Wife (photo by Kate Hoos)

 

Trophy Wife was and still is one of my favorite bands, certainly of the last ten years, and definitely beyond. A powerful post hardcore duo, I wish I’d gotten to see them more; they didn’t get up to NYC all that much unfortunately, but I did always try to make it when they were in town. I also was VERY excited to get to play with them at Two Piece Fest in 2015, one of the coolest events I got to play in any band I’ve been in, and a show that impressively Otto played while several months pregnant.

 

She is the current label head of Exotic Fever Records, a staunchly DIY label that has put out records by The Shondes, War On Women, and many more. She recently wrote the foreword of Punk Women: 40 Years of Musicians Who Built Punk Rock (I also contributed photos to this book, stay tuned for our review). The band has been pretty much inactive the last few years, but Otto has two kids now so that’s totally understandable and as she just filled me in, guitarist Diane is up in Maine now and that’s why the band has gone on hiatus for the time being. Diane just had a baby of her own so that is very exciting news for both members outside of the realm of music! And if they ever do get active in the band again, you know I’ll be there for it.

 

The last time I saw Katy was in 2019 when we bumped into each other in the street outside of one of the Bikini Kill re-union shows. In fact, we both played in Bikini Kill cover bands at different points too, though sadly not together!

 

Nerve Endings performing

Jarad Rogers of Nerve Endings (photo by Kate Hoos)

 

In 2017, I was riding along with Sister Munch on their summer tour, helping out and taking pics along the way when we found ourselves in Johnson City, Tennessee. I’d never been to Tennessee before then, much less spent any real time in the South before so I was unsure what to expect. Me a visibly queer person in the south…I can’t lie that I wasn’t nervous at first and expecting to get “faggot”  screamed at me from passing cars (because for some reason it’s always this word and I’m not sure why)…which has happened to me more than a few times in my life…or worse.

 

I’m sure some of that was fear over it being early in the Trump regime and also unfortunate stereotypes I’d been foolishly clinging to about life in the South.*** But then we got to town and to the show and any kind of doubt about being accepted or for my safety that I felt evaporated immediately. The scene in Johnson City welcomed us all with open arms and we found a community of really rad and like minded folks there who enthusiastically embraced me and the band; I still keep in touch with some of those folks today, Jarad being one of them.

 

He is one of the absolute best bassists I’ve ever heard or seen live, just on an entirely different plane of existence from many other bass players. Insanely intense intricate riffs and energy for daaaaays and nothing less is the best way to describe his playing. I know him from his work in Nerve Endings but know that he also plays in a few other projects in Johnson City and aside from that, he is a pretty incredible collage artist as well. Check out his work.

 

***We are all imperfect people and all have work to do to overcome the things we are taught or wrongly perceive about others. I’m so glad I’ve since gotten to spend more time in the South on that tour and others (though not yet an extended amount of time) meeting a lot of really wonderful folks who helped me shatter my earlier thoughts that everyone in the South was a right wing fanatic I should stay away from.

 

Kate Hoos performing

Kate Hoos aka me, myself, and I performing in 2017 (photo by Bruni Padilla). I got several comments (all from men) about my pedals being “backwards,” over the years.

 

Magnet that says "I May Be left-handed but I'm always right"

My mom still gets me silly lefty centric gifts.

 

Honorable mentions (mainly because I didn’t have room to include this many people OR I’m not the biggest fan of their music but they are still a well known lefty):

Paul McCartney, Phil Collins, Tony Iommi (yes I know all three of them are titans too but I only picked the top three so sorry guys, you get an honorable mention), Courtney Barnett, Hayley Kiyoko, Tim Armstrong, Dominic Howard, Georgia Hubley, Billy Ray Cyrus, Seal. Sorry to anyone else I forgot!

 

Editor’s Note: after sending this to a few of the lefties in the article, I’ve got a few more honorable mentions to add: Greg Barnett (of The Menzingers), Davey von Bohlen (of The Promise Ring, Cap’n Jazz, and Maritime), Eric Axelson (of The Dismemberment Plan and Martime), Joe Easley (The Dismemberment Plan- their rhythm section were both lefties which is definitely subconsciously why I love them).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Winterwolf, Gardenia, Niño, Dub Corps Int, Monte @ Arlene’s Grocery

Winterwolf, Gardenia, Niño, Dub Corps Int, Monte @ Arlene’s Grocery

Winterwolf at Arlene’s Grocery (photo by Kate Hoos)

 

Five band bills can go a lot of different ways. Sometimes you’re there and one band is killer while the rest barely classify as filler, maybe you’ll luck out and two are good. But other times, you find gold at the end of the rainbow and find yourself at a show with five bands that all knock your proverbial socks off. I found myself in just such a lucky spot recently at Arlene’s Grocery. While I was mainly there to see Winterwolf, I was excited to see Monte was on the bill too, but was totally unfamiliar with the other artists beforehand so wasn’t sure what to expect and was hoping I wasn’t in for having to sit through three dud bands. Fortunately this was quickly laid to rest because from start to finish, this was a genre defying night, and I really honestly loved each and every artist.

 

I got in a bit late but was able to catch the tail end Monte’s set, in time to see a good amount of intricate fret work from guitarist Caitlin Montclare, who I have seen shred often throughout the years and she just keeps getting better with time. Their sound vacillates between pop punk overtones to metal riffs and then back again in the blink of an eye for a fast paced energetic good time and a nice meshing of genres. They even pulled out a really fun punked out cover of “Como La Flor,” the classic track by the legendary Selena which got me and just about everyone else really excited.

 

Gardenia came up next and as readers may or may not know, I absolutely LOVE bass and drum bands (meaning in the rock sense not the electronic music sense, though I don’t mind some of that occasionally). They also had a number of genre blending tricks up their sleeves as well, mixing a funk vibe into some of their hard rock songs, though some songs were just straight up heavy riffs and all had a very clear 90s current flowing through them. Keeping in that vein, they covered “In Bloom,” by Nirvana; being one of my favorite Nirvana songs, I was VERY excited. They also did an interesting song that was half original, half interpolated from “Bite The Hand That Feeds,” by NIN…. I was like wait is this a cover….is this not cover….I spoke to singer/bassist Ryan Zakin afterward who confirmed it was a little bit of both. He has a soaring tenor, delivering his vocals like he could be in an alt rock band circa 1993, which zero complaints from me on that front! Both Zakin and drummer Tamir Malik bring a ton of passion to their performance and both were so friendly when I spoke to them afterwards so I’m very excited to keep up with what they are doing in the future.

 

Niño is a new project from drummer/producer Roger Cabrera (who I had actually met a few years ago when he was performing in the indie rock band Groupie) and this was their first live show (though some singles had previously been released in 2020 and 2021). Cabrera leads the band from behind the kit, incorporating live drums as well as electronic drums and samples, playing keys and providing vocals- both regular and vocoded- with lyrics in English and Spanish. It’s a lot for one person to pull off but he did everything without so much as a hitch at any point, I was very impressed! Indie, Latin, Disco, the songs seamlessly blend all these styles and more together for an incredibly infectious feel. Every song was a groove heavy jam that left not one person in the room standing still (including me, though I am more of a head bobber than full on dancer). A brand new single “Bite Marks,” has just been released and it has an electro and atmospheric twist to it even more so than the live performance did so it’s interesting to get to hear it in both contexts. When listening back to it while prepping this post, I found myself hitting repeat more than once, bopping in my seat at my computer. I am definitely going to be keeping my eyes on what Cabrera and co get up to and you should too. Check the song out now on Soundcloud or Spotify.

 

I was outside shooting portraits with Winterwolf so I missed most of Dub Corps International’s set unfortunately but was able to catch a few songs. They describe themselves as “a NYC heavy hitting cross pollination of Dub/Hard Core/Reggae/Punk/Dancehall/Metal/Afrobeat,” and they really owned each and every one of those elements of their sound. I was unable to find any of their recordings online, but I’d like to make it out again so I can enjoy a full set.

 

Winterwolf closed out the show and really, this band would have been a VERY hard act to follow. I’ve known them a few years now, and played a few shows with them under their old lineup. They were good then, and I really liked them, but this is a whole other level. This was the first time getting to see them as a trio and all I can say is GODDAMN, I was absolutely blown away. Their sound is still riffy heavily distorted bass/drums super energetic punk in the vein of Death From Above 1979 or Lightning Bolt, so you already know I’m in love with it. And now with having changed drummers to Nate Harris, a formidable hardcore drummer, and the addition of vocalist Tony $ixx, along with founding member bassist/vocalist Jehiel Winters, the combination of these three has turned them into a force to be reckoned with and one of the best bands I know of currently. Both $ixx and Winters share lead vocal duties and they complement each other perfectly. And more than that, when Winters is on the mic doing lead, $ixx backs him up vocally or more often than not can be found jumping in the air, dancing with amazing foot work, or often in- or on top of- the crowd. He is an incredibly skilled and engaging performer and I challenge anyone to find an artist hitting it at that level in any punk- or otherwise- band right now.

 

This band is so exciting on so many levels and one of my NYC faves; I really can’t wait for their upcoming EP “Unwell,” which is due out soon, though no official date has yet been announced. Harris also told me they are already at work on their next EP, which also very exciting news. They will be playing again on 8/28 at Shillelagh Tavern in Queens.

 

I absolutely love a show that blends genres and vibes so seamlessly the way this one did and that I can walk out of a fan of three new artists I previously knew little or nothing about. This is absolutely my kind of night and I highly recommend checking out all of these bands and keeping up with what they are doing.

 

 

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

 

 

 

MONTE

 

GARDENIA

Gardenia performing

Gardenia performing

Gardenia performing

Gardenia performing

Gardenia performing

Gardenia performing

Gardenia performing

Gardenia performing

Gardenia performing

Gardenia performing

Gardenia performing

Gardenia performing

Gardenia performing

 

 

NIÑO

Niño performing

Niño performing

Niño performing

Niño performing

Niño performing

Niño performing

Niño performing

Niño performing

Niño performing

 

 

DUB CORPS INTERNATIONAL

 

Dub Corps International performing

Dub Corps International performing

Dub Corps International performing

Dub Corps International performing

Dub Corps International performing

Dub Corps International performing

Dub Corps International performing

Dub Corps International performing

 

 

WINTERWOLF 

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

Winterwolf peforming

The Cocker Spaniels Are Still Alive and So Are You

The Cocker Spaniels Are Still Alive and So Are You

The Cocker Spaniels are releasing a wonderful new album, The Cocker Spaniels Are Still Alive and So Are You. This is the (essentially solo) project of Sean Padilla, a well known booking agent who describes himself as “a 40-year-old Black dad who likes Prince and Guided by Voices a lot, so I try to make music that splits the difference.” Padilla sings and performs almost everything himself on the album (his partner and kids accompany on a few songs). The album is a 21 song opus that is a “meditation on grief, loss, birth, and life; a reflection of his growth as a person and a musician over the last decade; a souvenir of how he stayed sane through a pandemic and the upheaval it caused; an album that sounds like folk-rock, power-pop, funk, grunge, dub, goth, punk, shoegaze, R&B, or black metal depending on the song.” Musically this is a very apt description as the songs nimbly blend genres, bobbing and weaving from song to song, never staying on one feel for too long; Padilla’s sharp pop sensibilities are the thread that ties everything together.

 

Lyrically the subjects are wide ranging but all are delivered with a clever, razor sharp wit, many of which are just so spot on and funny. You can feel yourself rolling your eyes on his behalf when he’s bemoaning gabby gossipy family members in “Family Snitch,” and in the absolutely hilarious “Nobody Wants to Play Last,” any musician who plays in a DIY band will immediately relate and laugh til they cry. Still keeping in the same sarcastic vein, he also does not shy away from offering pointed and very necessary commentary on the pervasive issues that plague us as a society such as racism and police violence toward Black people in “Racism Priest,” “Snuff Film,” and “Cops Don’t Care About The Drip,” Deeply personal narratives make their way here too, such as navigating the feelings of intense pain from losing a pregnancy but the hope that comes with finding out he and his wife are expecting again in “Baby’s Going To Make It This Time.” And yes two songs are even told from the point of view of a cat, the priceless and hard rocking “Eternal Grudge,” and the groovy “A New Hello,” sweetly sung from the perspective of a cat in heaven missing its person.

 

A dextrous wordsmith no matter what the song, it is really when the songs turn political that Padilla’s strength as a lyricist is on full display. While all the songs have somewhat of a satiric bite and aren’t afraid to dish out the snark, when the songs do touch the territory of commentary on systemic harmful issues, he has the unique ability to deliver the facts with a sardonic bent while keeping things engaging, making sure you as the listener have everything in clear focus because too many of us have been looking away for far too long; he knows this and his lyrics also say- without having to explicitly say- cut the crap because you aren’t going to look away any longer. This is a rare skill that brings to mind other singer/lyricists who also have this gift like Shawna Potter of War On Women, or the master of punk sarcasm himself, Jello Biafra.

 

He minces no words when calling out the toxicity of white guilt in “Racism Priest,” which was the first single from the album (read our review) or in the funked out synth bop “Snuff Film,” that very directly addresses police violence towards Black people and the fact that white America needs to wake the hell up: “Do you really need a snuff film to believe this could happen to me? Does it really take a snuff film for the world to show a little empathy? It’s been happening every day for four centuries. The only thing that seems to change is technology.”  In the bouncy “Cops Don’t Care About the Drip,” murderous and arrogant cops are again addressed and Padilla lists many high profile cases throughout the song, citing the fact that no matter how well dressed or educated the individuals were, or how many of them were doing absolutely nothing at the time of their killing, the officers involved still found bogus excuses and chose to act with despicable aggression and violence to target Black people merely for existing in the world or for- God forbid- working to make it a better place: “Medgar got killed in a suit, Malcolm got killed in a suit, Martin got killed in a suit, your swag won’t make you bullet proof. Cops don’t care about the drip, they’ll pull their guns out just as quick. Your skin will still be Black, your blood will still be red.”  These songs may come in a poppy funky package, with sugary harmonies to emphasize the words, but in the end they are 100 times sharper in their rebukes against racism as any political punk or hardcore record with a lead singer barking manifestos at the audience.

 

While there are so many strong songs on this collection, Padilla also takes the time to get tender and shows his love for his family, in the process really hitting the highest emotional notes of the album. Songs like “No Steps or Halves,” the hard rock into reggae fueled jam in which he describes meeting his oldest son for the first time, strike at the heart strings in a major way. He croons “You made a father out of me,” and I seriously got goosebumps, the love is so palpable, just radiating out of the song in waves. “Little Kid With a Big Brain,” is a piano heavy jam for his middle son, describing a bright and bubbly kid who loves to share everything that comes to mind which can be tiring for an adult, but delightful at the same time, Padilla singing “I know I want some peace and quiet but not right now, not this time” right before the song blows up into a hard rocking finale. “Rainbow Baby #2,” is for his youngest child, an adorable acoustic guitar number that concludes the album, complete with a wonderfully sweet cameo from baby Micah himself.

 

When I was sent this album for review, the name looked very familiar but I couldn’t place it at first. But after a listen, I remembered that I had actually discovered The Cocker Spaniels years ago in the blogosphere and had downloaded some tracks around 2004 or 2005ish, notably the brilliant “The Only Black Guy at the Indie Rock Show.” Those earlier songs really lay the ground work of where Padilla is at now and show off his many strengths both as a lyricist and songwriter. I admit I didn’t keep up with what he was doing after I found those songs all those years ago, but I was thoroughly delighted to connect those dots and get to listen to this album which is undeniably one of my favorites of 2021; I really look forward to seeing what Padilla creates next. He recently addressed the subject of new music on his Instagram saying “Despite what the long gaps between my albums may suggest, I’m always writing new songs; l just have to get better at carving out time to record them. I don’t wanna go a decade without releasing new music ever again. I look forward to sharing more of it with you as soon as possible.” I really don’t want him to go that long without releasing new music either!

 

The Cocker Spaniels Are Still Alive and So Are You is out on 8/13/21 on Evil Island Fortress.

 

The previous three Cocker Spaniels releases are also available for download on Bandcamp.

 

 

Gustaf- Book

Gustaf- Book

Gustaf performing in 2018 (photo by Kate Hoos)

 

The first time I saw Gustaf perform in 2018, I wasn’t entirely sure just what the hell was happening for at least the first three songs of the set. Which I realize now may have partially been the point. There was a lot going on: multiple singers- one of whom often drastically warps and alters her voice via an effects pedal- coffee can percussion, throbbing bass grooves, spitfire stage presence- so it took me a minute to catch up. Once I got myself oriented, I was immediately won over and knew I was seeing a band that was not just pushing the limits, but tearing the very concept of limits to shreds. In the time since that show (not counting the pandemic of course) they have tirelessly pushed to build a reputation as not only one of the hardest working, but also one of the most innovative live bands in New York, a title they well deserve. But while this was the case, their recorded output remained completely nil until they put out a two song single at the end of 2020, Mine.

 

Now with the release of their new single “Book,” the wait for an LP will soon be over which is welcome news to the devoted fan base they have built at their shows over the last few years. With the release of the song they also announced that their debut full length, Audio Drag for Ego Slobs, is due out this fall ahead of a string of tour dates they have scheduled. Fans are clearly hungry for new music from them as the song has already generated over 13,000 streams at time of writing, just over a week since the release of the song.

 

Musically, they perfectly pull off a rapid fire motorik feel that is a bit peppier and at a higher intensity level than the two other singles they currently have out. This is art punk at its finest, absolutely drawing on the seminal post punk bands of the past like The Slits and Delta 5, while somehow also taking any potential influences and turning the sound completely on its head. The song moves along at a steady clip with the bass and guitar pulsating back and forth in a syncopated groove that will dig inside of your brain in a serious way. And just as the song seems to reach the ultimate crescendo, that it will definitely swing back around to a dancey outro, it stops dead in its tracks and is over, the band once again pushing against any expectations on how a song “should” go.

 

The lyrics describe being pushed to the edge and things coming to a head, and not being able to go back to whatever there was before, “I can’t return, I won’t return, I can’t go back to your life again”  which is a feeling just about anyone can relate to after the end of any relationship be it romantic, friendship, artistic, or otherwise and just being so completely DONE.

 

Be warned, the insistent pulse of this song will get stuck in your head for hours afterwards, you won’t be able to listen to this just once, trust me on that.  If this first single is any indication, this album is going to be just as exciting, weird, and wonderful as seeing them play live and I can’t wait.

 

Gustaf performing

Gustaf performing in 2018 (photo by Kate Hoos)

 

Music video for “Book”

 

“Book” is available to stream on all major platforms now. The full length album Audio Drag for Ego Slobs is out October 1st on Royal Mountain Records, pre-orders are available now via Bandcamp.

 

The band will embark on a lengthy fall tour, supporting IDLES for most of their US dates in October before heading to Europe for solo dates and a handful of dates supporting Pillow Queens.

Nihiloceros- Mammal Science Fiction

Nihiloceros- Mammal Science Fiction

Nihiloceros (photo by Jessica Gurewitz)

 

If there was an award for hardest working band in Brooklyn, then forget nominating Nihiloceros for it, let’s just skip right to the end where we hand them the crown. This grungy power pop trio fires on all cylinders, all the time and never seems to lose an ounce of their enthusiasm in the process. Be it on stage, fighting for social justice, or when out supporting other bands- which guitarist/singer Mike Borchardt seems to be doing almost every night of the week his own band doesn’t have a gig- you’re going to get 110% pure Nihiloceros.

 

So then it’s really no surprise that their boundless energy and zest for performing follows them through the door of the recording studio too. On the heals of the driving, huge singalong first single “iamananimal” that was released last month, “Mammal Science Fiction,” is the second single on their upcoming EP Self Destroy. The song packs a walloping punch, chock full of crunchy hooks, radical bass lines, and big big harmonies.

 

On the lyrical themes, Borchardt elaborated and said the song “Imagines a not too distant future where we’ve evolved too far and too fast for the natural world to sustain us. Our human systems of greed and wealth no longer provide refuge as the species can do nothing but watch everything crumble around them. The rogue survivors of the dying planet attempt to escape into outer space on homemade rockets, leaving the remnants of earth and the entire human legacy of everything we’ve ever created behind to be erased”

 

Nihiloceros performing

Nihiloceros performing in 2018 (photo by Kate Hoos)

 

Borchardt takes the lead on vocals on many of the band’s songs, but on this track he is joined all the way through by bassist Alex Hoffman; the two singers bouncing off each other in a cat and mouse, call and response game, powerfully harmonizing together throughout. What I love most is that while they are singing at the same time, they are often not singing the same lyrics but- blink and you miss it- they will quickly join up on a phrase only to spring apart again, reminiscent of the best of Dig Me Out era Sleater-Kinney.

 

Musically, the choruses almost jump right out of the speakers to grab your attention; the extended bridge before the final chorus shows the band at its very best, running full speed ahead for an instrumental break that is hard hitting, catchy as hell, and undeniably super fun. In particular Hoffman’s strong bass chops are on display here, as he not only goes in tight on the neck to hit some soaring high notes, but for those you who aren’t eagle earred gear nerds, you might miss that he and Borchardt are actually trading back and forth on the lead lines. Borchardt takes first pass before ping ponging back to Hoffman who uses an effect pedal to achieve the lead simultaneously with his bass line; in fact, it is indeed him performing the main lead on bass throughout the entire track bolstered by the fuzz and buzz of Borchardt’s rhythm guitar. This might be the most clever approach to bass playing I’ve heard in a very long time and when I fully realized that that was what was happening at a live show, it took me a full five minutes to pick my jaw up off the ground.

 

The band has a slew of custom merch arriving along with the EP including limited edition guitar pedals, hot sauce, and even soap. And keeping in true infectious and unstoppable form, they are already writing songs for their next record which, if this song is the first taste of what direction it will go in, I’m confident in predicting that we are going to be in for one of the best records of 2022.

 

“Mammal Science Fiction” is available to stream everywhere now.

 

The cover of Self Destroy by Nihiloceros, complete with their logo made of duct tape, originally from their Warped Tour 2018 performance.

 

The full six song EP Self Destroy will release on September 17th on Totally Real Records. The music video for the song will premiere on August 10th.

 

They will play a release show for the single on Saturday August 7th at Bar Freda along with Shadowmonster, Leone, and Nuclear Family Fantasy. A release show for the EP is planned for September 18th at EWEL.

 

Limited edition lavender cassettes hand stamped with the band logo and limited edition 12″ purple vinyl with pink/red splatter are available now for pre-order via Bandcamp.