Single Serve 045

Single Serve 045

 

Hi! Hello! Here we are with some bite sized goodies and a taste of a some new things that we dug that came out in the last week (ish), quick fire responses to some great new music we think you should check out. This week we have Chantal [CW], Emily [EA], Kate B [KB], Kate H [KH] and Ray [RR] weighing in on a big list of killer songs and they have the scoop on plenty of new tunes, give ’em a listen!

 

Activity Careful Let’s Sleepwalk. Backed by an eerie marching snare drum that creeps along under Travis Johnson’s hushed chant and ethereal backing vocals descending down from some dark cloud, “Careful Let’s Sleepwalk” is the sound of looking over your shoulder. Johnson says that lyrically the song is “dream fragments, nights that all left me with the feeling of something being really wrong.” Activity will be touring starting in July, including a release show for their upcoming album Spirit in the Room at Baby’s All Right on July 16th. [CW]

 

Bush Tetras– They Live In My Head. The second single and title track off of the seminal NYC no wave/punk band’s first full album in eleven years, “They Live In My Head” begins as a ballad, with acoustic guitar underneath Cynthia Sley’s pained vocals. The sound here presents a very different Bush Tetras than what I’m used to, but showcases Sley’s dramatic prowess as a singer and lyricist. The chorus kicks in with panicked energy, speeding up, becoming more frantic every time we circle back to it, with RB Korbet’s bass line spinning and snapping like a viper. Sley escalates to a place of utter unhingery, practically barking by the end, repeating the words: “They live in my head / when they enter my dreams / life is not all it seems.”

 

The band has stated that “They Live In My Head” is “about people living in your head rent-free and how life is not all it seems—not quite a ballad, with its wild fast choruses, kind of like falling off a cliff.” Sley and fellow founding member/guitarist Pat Place lost drummer and longtime collaborator Dee Pop during the pandemic, and this new single reverberates with some of that grief. Sonic Youth’s Steve Shelley joined as their new drummer last year, and produced They Live In My Head, which comes out on July 28 on Wharf Cat. Since recording the album, Cait O’Riordan (formerly of The Pogues) has taken over the duties on the bass. You can next catch the band live on September 15 at Le Poisson Rouge. [KB]

 

cumgirl8gothgirl1. If you hadn’t told me this song was brand new, I’d think I was listening to a song birthed in a subterranean NYC nightclub at some point in the mid-1980s. Groovy, sexy, infectious and darkly weird, it’s an amalgamation of all the things this band does so well. This is the second single from their upcoming EP, phantasea pharm, and follows the awesome hazy post punk romp, “cicciolina,” a tribute to iconic Italian porn star turned politician Ilona Staller aka Cicciolina (read our thoughts).

On the EP, they share on their Bandcamp:

phantasea pharm was born out of an obsession with Ella Fitzgerald’s “Old McDonald” ahead of a show in Charlottesville, Virginia. The band decided to pay homage. [guitarist Veronika] Vilim dressed up in a cow leotard with pig accessories, [drummer Chase] Lombardo in a g-string and apron that read “The Grillfather,” [guitarist Avishag] Rodrigues became a lawn mower, and [singer/basisst Lida] Fox took on the role of a sexy rooster. “We went on stage that night and told everyone we were a ‘Fantasy Farm.’” They knew then that would become the basis of their new EP.

 

phantasea pharm will be released on 8/18 via 4AD.

 

Desert Mambas In The Middle. This solo project of Foxx Bodies guitarist Bailey Moses is poised to release the debut EP …But It’s a Dry Heat later this month, and if the first two singles are anything to go by, it promises to be a slice of gentle, confessional dreamy pop. “In The Middle” finds Moses coming to terms with their identity as a trans nonbinary person. The bass is almost cloudy, while the guitar shimmers on top, making the production mirror the trepidatious uncertainty of the songs topic. Moses says “I wrote this song thinking I needed to be extra secure in my understanding of this identity in order to field all of the inevitably ignorant questions that would come my way. But the truth is, my gender is an ever evolving and beautiful thing. And as scary as it can be, existing in the nebulous middle space has been one of the most liberating parts of my life.” …But It’s a Dry Heat will be out on Kill Rock Stars Nashville on June 29th. [CW]

 

DitzRiverstone. These UK Noise punks put out one of my favorite albums of 2022 (and one of my most listened to), The Great Regression, and they have returned here with a brand new offering which is part of Suicide Squeeze’s “Pinks and Purples” digital singles series. It at first finds the band wading a bit more towards experimental electro territory, before tearing into the loud noisy punk they are known for at the 1:45 mark. Channeling the frustration of being burnt out on tour, vocalist Cal Francis shares:

“We wrote this track on a day off on our July tour. Caleb had recently bought this sub phatty and had taken it with him so we were trying to find anyway to make it fit in a track. I think we were listening to lots of death grips and hardcore that week. The lyrics were related to whatever we were talking shit about that day. Dirt cheap baccy and annoying invasive TikToks. It’s hard to recall.”

 

In addition to being available digitally, the band is releasing a very limited run 7inch which will feature a remix of the song on the B-side by BABii. Pick yours up now directly from the band. [KH]

 

JOHNService Stationed. I was introduced to the London based JOHN, the grungy punk duo of John Newton (lead vocals/drums) and Johnny Healey (guitar/backing vocals) a few years ago by FTA webmistress, Jenifun, and have been a very big fan ever since, the combination of Newton’s distinct, gruff vocals and Healey’s frenetic guitar style hitting all the right places. They recently just announced their very first US tour (hitting NYC in late October at Saint Vitus) along with the excellent single “Trauma Mosaic.” Now even more good news has come from the pair who have announced their next album, A Life Diagrammatic, along with another stand out new track, “Service Stationed,” which features guest vocals from Leona Farrugia of fellow UK band, Ġenn.

 

With these newer songs, the band has shown they are ready, willing and able to branch off into exciting new directions from their earlier work and to break out of the traditional rock band mold. Healey saying plainly “We’re not just a rock band. There’s more to it than that” with Newton adding We wanted to further explore the space and ambience of our instrumentation, to offer an album that deliberately pushes and pulls in a multitude of directions throughout its duration.” A Life Diagrammatic is due out 9/22 via Brace Yourself and the band’s own label, Pets Care. You can find all dates of their debut North American tour here; you already know where to find me on 10/26. [KH]

 

King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard Dragon. King Gizz just Do! Not! Stop! And we don’t want them to, not if they keep putting out bangers like this one. Frantic guitar stylings and harsh vocals find the band in metal territory, while they sing of the “PetroDragonic Apocalypse” with “flapping wings weaving through / crocodile obsolete / flattened raze / spraying flames / blood curdle screech.” The ten minute song moves through various sections, including verses, chanted breakdowns, and Latin. Jason Galea provides the music video [warning for flashing imagery], saying “I wanted to explore a harsh distorted visual palette using my live visual setup mixed with PS1 cutscene inspired animation and studio footage I filmed of the band.” I’m going to be headbanging to this one for a while. PetroDragonic Apocalypse; or, Dawn of Eternal Night: An Annihilation of Planet Earth and the Beginning of Merciless Damnation is a double LP (like I said, they don’t stop) and will be out June 16th on their own label KGLW. [CW]

 

LocationsBetter Days. The Brooklyn based duo have released an emotional plea aimed at bringing attention to fighting climate change and pushing for climate justice. Using the framework of an emo-ish, alt rock song, the band is using it as an extension for their planned actions to take on one of the greatest crises of our generation. Check out their website to find out more information and how to get involved. [KH]

 

Mad Honey Fold. On this track, singer Tiffany Sutcliffe’s rich voice is woven into the tapestry of fuzzy, moody guitars. Sutcliffe says the song “is about feeling like you don’t have control of your own mind and trying to surround yourself with the right people to keep you grounded,” which is reinforced by the lyrics “pirouette in a strange formation / don’t wanna get caught in the fold / don’t think too clear so I keep you with me / it’s good but nobody knows.” The music video is made up of candid footage and features some very nice cat and dog moments. This Oklahoma City band’s debut album Satellite Aphrodite (you know how sometimes you just really like an album title? I like this one) will be out on Sunday Drive and Deathwish Inc. on September 22nd. [CW]

 

PJ Harvey– I Inside the Old I Dying. The legendary PJ Harvey has announced a European tour, and with it she’s released a brand new single. “I Inside the Old I Dying” is just as strange and eerie as its unsettling title. The three-minute track, which will be featured on Harvey’s upcoming album I Inside the Old Year Dying, is ominous yet tranquilizing, with lyrics that are simultaneously biblical and occult. Accordingly, the animated music video, directed by Cristóbal León and Joaquín Cociña, is equal parts heartwarming and horrific, from its gorgeous, crude paper-on-paper stop motion (though I swear that dog was real for a sec!) to the harrowing tale it tells. Harvey says the song is meant to capture an “ethereal and melancholic longing,” and that it does, with its soft arpeggios and Harvey’s yearning, beseeching vocals drenched in reverb. The new album is out July 7th on Partisan Records [EA]

 

PonsCoral King. The Brooklyn based no wave noise punks are hands down one of my favorite live acts currently gigging in NYC. After moving here from Vermont in 2021, they quickly established themselves as a group to watch with an intense, enthralling live show and a work ethic to match. They have played in just about every venue in NYC since it seems like and have toured all over the Northeast and beyond, always honing and refining their charismatic stage show, keeping it tight and nimble. While they remain a favorite band to see live, their recorded output has not been as frequent as their shows have been, something I have hoped would change.

 

It looks like that change may be on the horizon now as they recently released a new single, “Coral King,” and announced they have signed with Oliver Ackerman’s, Dedstrange. The label is home of course to Ackerman’s A Place To Bury Strangers as well as bands like GIFT, The Pleasure Majenta and Plattenbau (so clearly, some really good company). The band says the song is an “off-the-wall mix of theatrical noise rock and surreal psychedelia” and that sounds like the perfect way to not only describe the song but also the band as a whole. (I’ve also described them in the past as “frantic noise punk band that sounds like Brainiac and Hella had a baby that was raised by no wave wolves on acid.”) While the band has not yet announced a full length (fingers crossed for that for real), the single does coincide with a 10 week tour which will see the band bringing their killer live performance all over the US. We’ll unfortunately have to wait until August to see them again here in NYC, but I’m for sure looking forward to it. [KH]

 

PUP How To Live With Yourself b/w Smoke Screen & Kill Something. Toronto’s favorite sons dropped a trio of songs this week and fans of the band ought to be ecstatic. All three are out takes from the 2022 LP, The Unraveling Of PUP The Band. To these ears, the highlight of the three is easily “How To Live With Yourself.” Oddly enough, it was the first song singer/guitarist/principal songwriter, Stefan Babcock wrote for Unraveling and its a pure unadulterated PUP punk rocking blast. Written in the band’s classic mold, it ultimately didn’t fit with where the band was going with the rest of the album, which to an extent was a premeditated break from the traditional PUP mold.  

 

“Smoke Screen” starts off with a very sludgey death metal(y) intro before Babcock moves in with his dirgelike lyrics “When it all feels like it’s moving too fast / Light the fuse and lean into the blast” a throwback, in my opinion, to “Scorpion Hill” and the classic line of “and if the world is gonna burn, everyone should get a turn to light it up.” The last if the three, “Kill Something” is a slow burner that builds and builds at a snail’s pace before it finally reaches its crescendo, only to be punched in the gut when Babcock rolls into the chorus of “I want to killed something I love,” with the band chanting quietly in the background, “over and over and over.”  Once again PUP knows exactly what buttons to punch to the make their cavalcade of fans very very happy. [RR]

 

Ratboys – It’s Alive. Opening up with a reverb heavy guitar strum and a pounding drum beat before vocalist, Julia Steiner jumps in with her lilting yet gritty singing of the opening lyrics, “Outside my window /The birds dance alone / I sit back and take it in / Like some sort of medicine”.  

 

“It’s Alive” is the first single from the band’s upcoming 4th full length LP, The Window, but the first they’ve recorded start to finish with the current lineup. (Bassist Sean Neumann and drummer Marcus Nuccio are both relatively new-ish additions to the band.) The album itself has been a labor of love, having been worked on since 2020 with Steiner sharing “We spent 2020 demoing the songs, and spent 2021 practicing them.” Lyrically, “It’s Alive” feels very much to be a personal reaction to the isolation and forced solitude of the lock down period from which it was written. A reaction devoid of any anger or bitterness, instead one can’t help but feeling a bit hopeful hearing Steiner sing of being frozen in her house but looking to the stars above and knowing that there is still life to go on. [RR]

 

Shamir– Oversized Sweater. Acoustic guitar brings us into this steady mid-tempo alt-pop winner, with Shamir’s uniquely gorgeous countertenor voice rising above. Featuring an awesome sliding bass line, the instrumental break at the end will have you bouncing around, as his voice glides up into even higher falsetto territory. “Oversized Sweater” is the first single off of Homo Anxietatem, the ninth album from the Philly-via-Las Vegas-based eclectic musician, to be released on August 18 as Shamir’s debut on the venerable Kill Rock Stars label.

 

Shamir explained the history of “Oversized Sweater” in a statement:

 

“The first quarter of 2020 before lockdown I felt a lot of anxiety. I was fresh out the psych ward and had quit smoking weed and cigarettes cold turkey. I spent the first couple months of 2020 knitting this huge baby blue sweater. It’s basically a wearable security blanket that I used to channel all my anxiety into. I wear it all the time.” 

 

The song is beautifully explored in an intimate video where Shamir dances around in his underwear in what feels like his childhood bedroom, the walls covered with posters of various music idols: Selena, The Buzzcocks, Snoop Dogg, Amy Winehouse. Shamir appears so beautifully vulnerable here, in both the video and the music; I want to wrap him up in that Oversized Sweater and just hold on. But that vulnerability fuels this prolific powerhouse of an artist, and I’m excited to hear the entirety of Homo Anxietatem later this summer. [KB]

 

Sharon Van Etten– Quiet Eyes. Sharon Van Etten works her lush emotional magic once again with this new single that’s featured over the end credits of the A24 film, Past Lives, a story of childhood friends reuniting in South Korea, directed by Celine Song. The beautiful ballad washes over you with shimmering vocals swelling with flickering harmonies. The expansive instrumentation includes acoustic guitar strums that provide the rhythmic bones for a repeated ascending piano line that’s echoed by what sounds like cello as the song builds. Van Etten’s lyrics stand strong and reflective as always: “Is this really a mystery life? / Where we only learn from our own mistakes.” On Twitter, Van Etten shared her love for the new film, which inspired the song: “The idea of past lives, who I used to be, what I could have been, people I lost touch with, parts of myself I lost along the way… is a beautiful, intangible, relatable concept that Celine Song so gracefully explores in her story, Past Lives.” Van Etten co-wrote the track with Mini Mansions’ Zachary Dawes, and Grizzly Bear members Christopher Bear and Daniel Rossen provided the film’s score. [KB]

 

Sweeping Promises– You Shatter. An ethereal synth line slinks above many layers of guitar and electronic patterns, with Lira Mondal’s ever-present bass groove deep in the underbelly. This second single off the forthcoming Good Living Is Coming For You (due out on June 30 via Sub Pop and Feel It Records) will get you bouncing and dancing around the room, but there’s an edge of malice driving the party. Mondal and Caufield Schnug offer only this statement about the song: “‘You Shatter’ is our ode to being a hammer.” Mondal’s fantastic voice achieves a sharper edge here than I’ve heard from her before, and it works perfectly with the violent suggestion of the lyrics: “How you are to me / You shatter / A distant memory /You shatter.” I didn’t think I could love the brilliant duo from Lawrence, Kansas more, but both this track and the previous single, “Eraser,” are showing them exploring exciting new territory with synthesizers and how they’re recording.  I cannot wait to get my hands on the full record on June 30! Also, they’re gonna be at Music Hall of Williamsburg on August 10, and it’s not sold out…yet. [KB]

 

Teenage Wrist Still Love (featuring Softcult). A duo since 2020, Teenage Wrist are still making grungey shoegazey alt-rock. On “Still Love” they are joined by fellow alt-rockers Softcult, also a duo (twin siblings Phoenix and Mercedes Arn-Horn, who bill themselves as “music for mall goths”) who share songwriting credits. The song switches direction near the end, moving from lyrics that seemingly deal with self doubt (“I talk big shit / I got nothing to back it up / I’m the shame and the sin of men / the mistakes of my future son / but I still love“)  over to an environmental theme (“will our children kill for water, will they ever see the ocean / when the oil runs out we’ll go deeper down the well“). Still Love is out on Epitaph on August 4th. [CW]

 

TVODPoppies/Since You Been Away. Brooklyn disco post punks and fan faves TVOD have just released a new double single, which pair nicely with the three previously released stand alone singles “Goldfish,” “Mantis,” and “Alien” from earlier this year. In addition to their time in the studio, they’ve been gigging hard around BK and beyond, really ramping things up over the last year or so, touring frequently and are indeed about to hit the road again supporting Thick (a band they also used to share members with in their earliest iteration). These songs have been staples of their live set and are always super fun to dance to, and now you can do it in the comfort of your own living room in your undies with your cat if you want (my preferred way to dance really) or on your morning commute bashing your way through slow walkers on the subway. No word yet on a full length from this crew, but I am primed and ready for when they lock that down. [KH]

 

Wombo Thread. A far more laid back track than the preceding single “Slab” (read our thoughts), “Thread” finds minimalist guitar twirling around an easygoing yet persistent bass and drum line while singer Sydney Chadwick weaves a vocal thread of her own, breathy but not becoming lost in the music: “Wanted to be so small you could fit me into the palm of a hand, but there’s only so many things that can happen. Who was singing about loneliness?” The Slab EP will be out June 9th on Fire Talk. [CW]

TDA, Pons, Venus Twins, Theophobia @ The Broadway

TDA, Pons, Venus Twins, Theophobia @ The Broadway

Tits Dick Ass at The Broadway (photo by Kate Hoos)

 

Love was in the air on Valentine’s Day at The Broadway. Love of noise, love of punk, love of chaos, love of radical queerness and much much more. So you know it was exactly my kind of Valentine’s party and exactly the kind of night that fuels my fucking life-force. On the bill were two of my Brooklyn favorites—Pons and Venus Twins (who were a last minute addition after another band dropped off)—as well as Tits Dick Ass who had been on my list to catch for a while, and Theophobia who I had previously been totally unfamiliar with.

 

Theophobia kicked off the night, and the electro pop rock project—Dylan Mars Greenberg on synth/vox and Matt Ellin on guitar/vox—were as much musical theater as a band. They put on an endearing and highly energetic set filled with hilarious interludes and stage banter (the band has been together for 75 years, they have it mastered!) with videos by Greenberg projected behind them. It was the perfect primer for the night.

 

Venus Twins hit the second slot of the night and hot daaaaamn, they never disappoint! I’ve seen this band many times now and they are a well oiled noise machine, a swirling chaos kept just at the edge of control, hammering your heart and your mind with the sheer levels of their wicked intensity. This was a treat in that I had just seen them the week before (see pics) and didn’t find out til I was heading out the door to go to the show that they would be playing for a big added bonus to an already stacked show.

 

Pons is another band I have seen many times now and the potent no-wave trio has also never let me down. And on this night, they were more incendiary than I’ve ever seen them, an explosive current bubbling just below the surface that boiled over during their last song, a massive vortex of noise flying out from the stage that culminated with guitarist Sam Cameron literally r i p p i n g all of the strings right off of his guitar to signal the end of the set. I needed a minute to catch my breath afterwards, holy fuck!

 

Pons performing

Pons at The Broadway

 

Tits Dick Ass closed out the night and were celebrating the release of their debut single, “Girlfriend From Hell,” which came out later in the week. TDA has been creating a buzz in the local scene for the last year or so and had been very high up on my list to see but something kept getting in the way every time I planned to go see them (mostly work, the downside of working nights). I was stoked to finally break the missing streak and was definitely not disappointed!

 

Here’s what I had to say about the new single in our Single Serve column last week:

The Brooklyn based band has made quite the splash on the NYC scene in the last year with their live shows attracting bigger and bigger crowds and for good reason, they are unabashedly queer as fuck with a stage presence that is massive paired with a ferocious sound; they hit in all the best ways. Now they have released their debut single, the no-wave punk ripper, “Girlfriend From Hell,” which is also the first taste of their upcoming debut album, Burn A Bitch, due out this spring on House of Feelings. Despite not having synths, it reminded me a bit of the synth punk nightmare classics of Screamers and definitely is a kindred spirit to the freaky outsider no-wave and punk of the late 70s and early 80s. The song features a video that was filmed at local venue Rubulad and directed by filmmaker Dylan Mars Greenberg️️️. A companion remix was also released alongside the song for acidic and cool re-interpretation that feels downright dystopian. Read an interview with the band here.

 

There was a little bit of technical difficulty with Julia Pierce’s guitar that took a minute to sort out at the start of the show and as she was fixing that, an audience member jokingly yelled “now you’re just edging us!” which was met with very hearty laughs. It was a minor delay though and things quickly got moving. From then on out, start to finish their set was indeed, massive and queer as fuck, nothing short of ferocious in absolutely the best and most cathartic ways possible. Bassist Seth Sosebee was in and out of the crowd numerous times, driving the energy up to a wild fever pitch and drummer Tom Person hammered a hard driving beat behind Pierce’s buzzsaw guitar and awesome vocal attack. This is a band that knows how to work a room and I suspect it will only be a matter of time before those rooms begin growing in size.

 

You can sum this night up like this “punk as fuck// queer as fuck” and as far as I’m concerned, you can’t ask for a better way to spend Valentine’s Day than that.

 

Watch the video for “Girlfriend From Hell” below. Scroll down for pics of the show (photos by Kate Hoos)

 

 

 

THEOPHOBIA

Theophobia performing

Theophobia performing

Theophobia performing

Theophobia performing

Theophobia performing

Theophobia performing

Theophobia performing

Theophobia performing

Theophobia performing

Theophobia performing

Theophobia performing

Theophobia performing

Theophobia performing

Theophobia performing

 

VENUS TWINS

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

 

 

PONS

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

 

 

TITS DICK ASS

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

Tits Dick Ass performing

 

 

 

Pons- The Pons Estate

Pons- The Pons Estate

Pons The Pons Estate

 

If you’ve had the opportunity to see the Daniels’ film Everything Everywhere All At Once, you understand the lack of inherent meaning is the very thing that makes all things equally meaningful. The Brooklyn noise-punk trio that FTA’s very own EIC describes as a “frantic noise punk band that sounds like Brainiac and Hella had a baby that was raised by no wave wolves on acid,” is the musical equivalent of that very same ethos.

 

As the band tells us via a press release, they: “Meld the angular dissonance of 1970’s post-punk and no wave with the brash presentation and theatricality of glam rock, unpredictable math rock grooves, and tribal group percussion, Pons is a band that embodies deconstruction and refuses to compartmentalize its influences; A sonic deluge that is rivaled by few in its throttling intensity and leaves only the luckiest of eardrums unscathed.”

 

Welcome to The Pons Estate; a six-track barrage of harsh melodies and percussive abrasion that unfolds more like a journey through the imagination of 3D space than it does your standard EP.

 

“While the group’s confrontational and unhinged modus operandi often leads to comparisons to artists such as Death Grips, Swans, and The Stooges, Pons is a band that consistently defies comparison and creates music that truly resists.” And indeed, their sound can’t be nailed down to just one thing, a no wave fury that sees elements of noise, grunge, post-punk, surf, metal, glam and more weaving throughout their sonic tapestry. 

 

Pons portrait

Pons (photo by Sydney Bradford)

 

The trio functions well without bass by employing two drummers—Jack Parker sitting at a traditional kit and Sebastian Carnot with a standing kit sans bass drum— who together provide a bedrock of percussion allowing the barrage of guitar and vocals from Sam Cameron to spill over the hefty wall of noise. It’s an all out non-stop bombardment of start-stop blast beat chaos that’s just mathy enough to cause confusion, loud enough to keep your ears ringing the next day, and so intense, just watching them is exhausting. 

 

There is a very conscious and deliberate effort to take “the ethos of classic glam rock and rock n’ roll [and filter it] through Pons’ angular and alien lens to create and vibrant and sprawling six track EP the leads the listener on a journey through the various rooms of band’s frightening and alluring estate.”

 

Highlights include polyrhythmic freakout “SEVEN ATE NINE,” which is the perfect exposition of their many layers, striking all your nerves at once as your synaptic pathways form new connections and your brain finds sonic equilibrium. Whereas “HUNGAHUNGA” relentlessly jerks you back and forth—the whiplash-inducing track rides like an old wooden roller coaster click clacking through the drops and held together by nothing but a series of rusty pins.

 

 

To fully experience Pons though, it’s imperative you catch their live show. Not only is it in my opinion the only true setting that can capture the crucial visceral component of their sound (the studio can only do so much to contain the frenetic energy of a band like this after all), but their live show also employs swords, snakes and other theatrics that feel like a twisted adventure of Zelda; I’m plugged in and ready for the ride!

 

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons live (photos by Kate Hoos)

 

The Pons Estate was self-released and is available on all major streaming platforms, cassettes are available for pre-order via Insecurity Hits. The band will play a release show on Sunday 12/18 at The Sultan Room with Venus Twins, Lip Critic and ID Sus.

 

 

 

Fortezza, Pons, Tahiti Syndrome @ TV Eye

Fortezza, Pons, Tahiti Syndrome @ TV Eye

Fortezza at TV Eye (photo by Kevin McGann)

 

Last week, Ridgewood’s TV Eye was host to a killer triple bill that most likely reverberated to the other four boroughs and beyond. Music that ranged from garage rock, punk, psych, experimental and jazz, and performances that were as wild as the sound.

 

First up was Tahiti Syndrome and from the first wail of the saxophone I was hooked. More bands lately, from Black Country New Road to Squid to Glashow’s Kaputt, are using sax and trumpet and really expanding the range of the broadly used post punk and psych rock labels. For me there was an element of Bowie’s final masterpiece, Blackstar, with a jazz rock feel thanks to Tahiti’s skilled players. Imagine my surprise to find out this was their first show!

 

Next up was Pons who never disappoint. They’re one of those 3-piece acts that’s leaving you wondering How the hell are only three people doing this?? It’s a rhythmic, percussive assault with a frenetic guitar and vocal style that creates a sound all their own. I’ve read that their influences range to Bowie to the Stooges to Suicide but there’s no denying that a Pons song sounds like no other. They put it all out there too in their performance and leave nothing on the stage (or on the floor where they sometimes end up). 

 

Headlining the night was North Carolina’s Fortezza. And while this was my first time catching a show it won’t be my last. Like Tahiti and Pons, Fortezza also combines various styles of music to create a sound that they themselves describe as ‘garage punk to avant-garde jazz’. Performance-wise it was off the wall intense with Tristan Smith (guitar/vocals) bouncing off the stage, rolling on the floor and beating the hell out of his guitar. Rounding out the band is Maddie Kendrick on bass/vocals and Matty Garau on drums/vocals, and also like the Pons, it’s crazy to fathom how three people can create such a wall of sound. 

 

Both Pons and Fortezza are currently out on separate tours and people should catch them wherever they can. 

 

Scroll down for pics of the show (photos by Kevin McGann)

 

TAHITI SYNDROME

Tahiti Syndrome performing

Tahiti Syndrome performing

Tahiti Syndrome performing

Tahiti Syndrome performing

Tahiti Syndrome performing

Tahiti Syndrome performing

Tahiti Syndrome performing

Tahiti Syndrome performing

Tahiti Syndrome performing

Tahiti Syndrome performing

Tahiti Syndrome performing

 

PONS

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

 

FORTEZZA

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

Fortezza performing

 

Venus Twins, Pons, YHWH Nailgun @ The Broadway

Venus Twins, Pons, YHWH Nailgun @ The Broadway

Venus Twins at The Broadway (photo by Kate Hoos)

 

If there’s one thing I love, it’s a noise punk show. Heavy on the noise AND the punk please. I was due to work Patti Smith’s show the same night at a large venue across town and was going to run over after my shift to catch the very end of things, but then luck intervened and my boss was looking to cut some staff for the evening so I jumped at the chance to be there for the majority of the show and get my noise fix in. (No offense to Ms. Smith of course, I’ve seen her twice already and worked one of her shows; she was fantastic every time.)

 

YHWH Nailgun opened the evening and this was not only their EP release but their very first show as well. A Bandcamp page exists that has two older releases on it from 2020, so it appears that maybe this was a recording only project at first that now has evolved into a full band. This is deeply experimental music synth, jazz, and rock all thrown in a blender and played in a dark and craggy cavern. I was impressed with their musicianship and am going to keep an eye on where they go next.

 

I saw Pons for the first time just six days before this show and in my write up on that one, I described them as a frantic noise punk band that sounds like Brainiac and Hella had a baby that was raised by no wave wolves on acid and that’s an assessment I stand by. The lighting at this show made that even more of a reality and a very delightful fever dream watching them. This band doesn’t hold back and their duel drummers make things even more exciting; they are hands down absolutely one of my new favorites to watch. I’ve been digging into their recorded catalog to get myself caught up and they have a new single coming on 3/16 (check their social media for pre-save info). You can catch them live next on 3/10 at Trans Pecos.

 

Bass and drums punk bands are my favorite type of lineup/sound so it really should be no surprise that Venus Twins, being masters of the style, are one of my favorite bands (and yes the name is literal, they are in fact identical twins, Jake and Matt Derting, drummer and bassist/vocalist respectively). I discovered them while working sound for one of their shows in 2019 and every time I grumble that working nights can be a drag, I think back to nights like that and I remember that it’s actually incredible because I get paid to listen to music every night and get to make awesome discoveries like this along the way. They’ve been back and forth between Brooklyn and Denton, TX ever since the pandemic hit and have been hard at work on new stuff throughout that time, playing tons of shows in Texas and touring when they have been able to. This band has one level which is MAXIMUM, going hard for every single second they’re on stage.

 

I know I’ve already made a comparison to Hella in this review, but it’s hard not to again with these guys, particularly when it come to Jake Derting’s drumming and its clear influence by Zach Hill. But if I’m being brutally honest here, while I do love Hella, I really think Hill was unnecessarily busy most of the time and often failed to strike the right balance with the rest of the song in many of this other projects, stomping on parts that otherwise could have been easier and more enjoyable to listen to had he just pulled back a little (I’m thinking of his work specifically in Team Sleep and The Ladies here). But this isn’t a review about him and it is about Venus Twins so let’s get back to it….Derting has a frantic style for sure, but wins this “contest” by a mile because he knows how to pair it more succinctly with what his counterpart is doing (call it twin instinct?). He also manages to make a single kick pedal sound like double bass and never stops hammering the beats (breaking his pedal halfway through the set in fact). The band has been working on new music and have a split coming as well as a new album which you know I am 100% ready for! They will be back at TV Eye on 4/8 and are looking to make the permanent move back to Brooklyn so we may be seeing much more of them soon which is a-okay in my book.

 

A 4th band, Castle Rat, closed out the night but sadly I had to make my departure right as they were beginning their set. They’ve got some gothy Sabbath vibes going on (and at least one member sporting a plague doctor stage outfit) so I’ll keep them on my radar to catch a show some other time.

 

If you’re a noise rock fan (or even otherwise) these are all bands to keep on your radar for sure.

 

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

 

YHWH NAILGUN

YHWH Nailgun performing

YHWH Nailgun performing

YHWH Nailgun performing

YHWH Nailgun performing

 

PONS

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

Pons performing

 

VENUS TWINS

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing

Venus Twins performing