Chicago

Dogs At Large @ Hungry Brain (3/1)

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Back in December we shared the first single, "All Day", from the forthcoming LP, Delusions of Paradise, from Dogs At Large. The latest single is called “Fool’s Paradise” and it was released last week.

The new album will be released on March 1st and you can help the band celebrate at Hungry Brain on March 1st with Ester, Elijah Berlow, and Fine Prints DJs.

Austin

Leah Wellbaum of Slothrust Expounds on Influences, Music and Making It Through Life

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Leah Wellbaum is the sole guitarist and vocalist for the grunge-influenced indie rock band, Slothrust. Having been playing in the group for nearly a decade, Leah has made her signature brooding lyrics stick in listener’s minds, and combined with the band’s technical and inventive musicianship, it’s earned them a sizeable indie following. Slothrust released their fourth album, The Pact, in September 2018 and have been on tour supporting it. We checked in with Leah to dig into the origins of the band, influences and how to pass time in a touring van.

 

    Slothrust met while attending Sarah Lawrence. Were you all musicians when you enrolled?

                                       Yeah. Yeah. Yes.

                                                      You can definitely tell that the band is a bit more technical than your average grunge band in some respects. What influences led to Slothrust?

                                       We studied blues and jazz with two really amazing teachers, which are Glenn Alexander and Matt Wilson. Matt Wilson’s one of the head, top jazz drummers right now. And Glenn Alexander is an amazing guitarist in all respects. So we had played in blues and jazz groups together. We all can be accompanyists too. Like, yes, I’m a front person in this project, but at the same time I’m equally excited to just accompany another vocalist, another front person. We all really give a shit about older music. The new stuff right now, there is a lot of things that are still awesome about it, but we also, I think, are pretty traditional in some senses in terms of what we value in music.

                                                      You guys spend a lot of time together obviously as a band. What do you like doing outside of music?

                                         We played a really lackluster hand of cards the other night. Kyle invented a card game recently that we played in the car that was really cool. I gotta say I just really, really, really love Will and Kyle’s personalities. And that makes this whole circumstance a lot easier. Because I think we all get along as friends. We share similar passions and have similar pastimes and want similar things in life. So that’s nice.

                                                      Your songwriting is incredible but Will’s drumming also stands out as a bit more elevated than other bands in your genre.

                                      Yeah. Will’s the shit. I’ve worked with him for a really long time. He works really hard and he’s really… Honestly, he’s one of the most special people I’ve ever met in my life. You know, drumming aside, he’s just a very kind, special individual. He and I really see each other in a specific way and in terms of playing, he’s flexible and he’s down to work. And I still find it exciting to jam with these people and I think that’s really special and uncommon.

                                                      If you weren’t doing music, what do you think you’d be doing right now?

                              I’ve been asked this question before and it’s hard to answer because the other thing I do besides music is teach music.

                                                       Some people are like "If it wasn’t for music, I’d probably hang myself" or something to that extent.

                                 I don’t think I’d kill myself or anything. I mean, you know, we all have our times, but I like to teach. I’m happy working with kids. I’m happy working with adults. I like to spread music as a means not to draw financial success, but as a form of not only self expression, but focus. Because in the end we’re all so tortured by our own minds and having something to focus on sort of detracts from that. This is a good quote I’m giving you.

                                                      Nice. Was there a certain time that you felt Slothrust was finally picking up? You did the Jam in the Van, but was there a moment where you were like, "Okay. This band might stay together for a few years?"

                                         No. I always knew we’d stay together but I think it’s pretty clear to all of us that we’re a slow burner. But we don’t really give a shit. That’s fine. We’ll just slow burn forever if we want to. If not, then not. We probably will. I don’t know. I like these people. They like me. It’s all good.

                                                      “Magnets Part Two” is my favorite song of yours. I’m just guessing here, but is that about addiction?

                                      I guess I’ll be explicit with you because this question has been asked to me particularly frequent amount. I feel like my syntax is shitty right now. I wish it was better. That’s about my old roommate Jack. He ended up killing himself in, I think, 2011. I thought about him very frequently. I had trouble processing all of it because I was in the situation where I needed to graduate from college. And I wanted to do what he wanted me to do and I wanted to do whatever felt right for everyone. Whatever that means. It doesn’t really mean anything. But yeah, I guess, to sum it up it’s about losing someone that you weren’t ready to lose but eventually you have to gain acceptance in that. Because if you don’t, you’ll just be tortured forever. And if you and that person had a certain kind of lock, which Jack and I did, then they wouldn’t want you to be tortured forever.

                                                      Lou Reed or Bowie?

                                     I hate that you asked me that. I just hate that you asked me that. That’s about it.

                                                      Beer or wine?

                                     If I had to die with either in a goblet in my hand I would pick wine because it’s closer to blood.

                                                      Paradise Rock Club or Roseland Ballroom?

                                       Didn’t exist when I was growing up. Paradise did but it didn’t let people under 21 in and Roseland Ballroom, I don’t think it existed. So fuck both those places. Access and Avalon forever. Neither exist. Fuck what’s happened to Boston. The police destroyed it. We used to have a good punk scene. And they took that away from us because of noise ordinance. And everyone can go and-

                                                      Fuck themselves?

                                     … have a bad old time.

                                                      If you had to pick anybody to share the stage with, who would you pick and why?

                                         Oh, I’d pick John Fahey. He could come on and do some amazing finger picking set during any song and I would be so pleased to hear that melodic contour. That’s it.

 

NYC

Noise Pop Showcase: Rex Ruit at the Starline February 28th

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We’re happy to report that Oakland’s own Rex Ruit will be playing at The Starline Social Club this Thursday the 28th as part of Noise Pop. Tracks like “Vertigo” and “South” give this rocky post-punk album a lighter feel. Lovely guitar melodies blend with vocals that come in and out of clarity and really push this album into an almost dream-pop beachy realm while still keeping that alternative feel the band is known for. They’ll be part of a pretty killer lineup: Black Marble, Spiritual Cramp and Shutups at one of our favorite venues. –Michelle Kicherer, Associate Editor

Chicago

WateRR “The Dispensary”

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On this latest album, The Dispensary, local emcee WateRR teams up with London’s Farmabeats to take a hazy journey through a singular medicinal theme. The album features a contribution from Detroit’s Ty Farris on “N.I.T.V.”, and follows WateRR’s three EP’s in 2018.

Philadelphia

Ticket Giveaway: Deerhunter with L’Rain at Union Transfer This Friday

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The brilliant and always unpredictable Deerhunter will be gracing Union Transfer’s stage this Friday, March 1, presented by Drexel University’s WKDU 91.7FM. Bradford Cox and the gang will also be supported by Brooklyn sound sculptor Taja Cheek, a.k.a. L’Rain. To enter for a chance to win a pair of tix, just send an email to thedelimagazinephiladelphia@gmail.com with the subject line "Why Hasn’t Everything Already Disappeared?". Please also include your cell number in the body of the message (in case of an emergency). Good luck!

Chicago

PreBen “Manticore” Single

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PreBen is the work the artist and musician Ben Dorsz. He has released an array of singles and albums filled with experimental electronic music over the last few years, and dropped his latest, “Manitcore”, this month. This single, with a b-side called “Against It”, is looping dance track steadied by an addictive beat under layers wrapped and creative sounds.

Nashville

Andrew Leahey’s “Airwaves”, out 03.01, channels golden classic rock era

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As a musician, I hear plenty of songs where I curse the ground upon which I walk, for I’ve heard the kind of sound that I wish I could produce. Enter Andrew Leahey, whose tracks have caused me to spit more well-deserved expletives at the soil than I can count. Leahey’s new album Airwaves — which drops everywhere on 03.01 — channels the songwriter’s favorite artists such as Petty and Springsteen, whose music he cherished as a kid. The album comes as the result of a creative spurt done after a brain operation that almost cost Leahey his life. Thank the lucky stars for his survival, because Airwaves has tracks that channel the earworm classic rock sound that will get locked in your head. "Moving Like The Weather" is a love track that thunders with stadium-rock style passion. Leahey’s cover of Echo & The Bunnymen’s "Lips Like Sugar" rips just as hard as the original. And album singles "Airwaves" and "Queen and King of Smaller Things" will have you — and audiences around the country — falling for Leahey’s blue-collar but polished sound.

Catch Leahey & the Homestead play 3rd and Lindsley on March 3rd when they come through town on their tour. Take a listen to the anthemic "Queen and King of Smaller Things" below. – Will Sisskind

Philadelphia

New Music Video: “Loving You (Is Such A Waste of Time)” – The Trust Fund Kids

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This Time Next Year, the debut album from Kevin Connor, a.k.a. The Trust Fund Kids, is slated for release on March 15. Jumping out of the gates, "Loving You (Is Such A Waste of Time)" captures an exuberant, appreciative, yet simultaneously dejected lo-fi bedroom-rock sound. Taking in the scenic view, in snow covered suburbia, the footage has a familiar, neighborhood aesthetic. However, as one is taken around a path toward the video’s conclusion, an eerie clarity in the music plays out.

NYC

Emily Reo to celebrate release of new record with show at Baby’s All Right 04.26

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For these past few years, the conversational focus on mistreatment of women in entertainment has been in turns cathartic and grueling. It’s a long overdue conversation, and it was only a matter of time before it started to make its appearance as a focal point in music. Songwriter Emily Reo chooses pop as a medium to explore misogyny in the music industry and in every day life on “Strawberry”, the premiere track off her upcoming record Only You Can See It. Balancing sardonic lyrics with an anthemic instrumental, "Strawberry" features Reo’s voice front and center. After listing off a number of micro aggressions from patronizing men, she belts, “How many girls in this city are getting T-I-R-E-D”, and it’s easy to imagine a crowd screaming back in response. The track gives the clear impression of an artist coming into her own, ready to share herself with the world and not willing to take crap from anyone. Only You Can See It will be released on April 26th, and Reo will be celebrating the release that night at Baby’s All Right. In the meantime, mark your calendar, and stream “Strawberry” below. – Sunny Betz 

L.A.

All Things Blue shares prickly, defiant new single “Yellow Heart”

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India Coombs has had enough. Coombsthe LA-via Pennsylvania transplant behind duo All Things Blueis moving on from an unreliable partner who’s gotten far too many second chances on new single Yellow Heart." "You promised me a lot of hope/ but you never followed through," Coombs wails, letting her feelings simmer as she lays out a barbed, funky riff. Her joyful release is juxtaposed with a fiery guitar lead, all while exploring her strengths and her foibles in an approachable manner.

"Yellow Heart" is the latest single off of All Thing Blues’ forthcoming EP, "Doomed to Lose," which they will self-release on March 14. Juan Rodríguez

Photo: Anna María Lopez