Born in an Oberlin, Ohio basement, The Roulettes practiced on borrowed equipment next to a leaky washer/dryer combo and grew up playing living room parties. After moving to Portland, the Roulettes met up with label Lucky Madison to record the first ever LM release, their self-titled EP, at Portland’s Jackpot! Studios with engineer Larry Crane (Sleater-Kinney, Stephen Malkmus, etc.). Later, unreleased Roulettes tracks saw them moving into darker territory with songs like "2:1," "Do it Again," and “Snow Day 2004/Moon Over Miami” (their meditation on volcanoes, false promises, and WMDs). But the band continued to pay tribute to nights at Chopsticks karaoke bar, the Fred Meyer Can-Do Machine, and the ever-popular montecristo sandwich. Long ago and far away, the Roulettes graced the cover of the Willamette Week and played all over their beloved Portland, from Ash Street to Slabtown to the original Rock’n’ Roll Camp for Girls. In New York, they played at the long gone Meow Mix. The Roulettes are back in NYC, where they played at CMJ in 2009 and at venues such as Cakeshop, Santos Party House, Union Pool (w/Class Actress and Rebecca Schiffman), Bruar Falls, and Bowery Electric. The band is currently writing new songs and working on pre-promotion for their "Hot Ticket" video. Look for video spots in a couple months with writers like Rob Sheffield (of Love is a Mix Tape), bands like Duty Free, a stray ship’s captain, and… you? See them live at Surreal Estate on September 3.