Fest Intentions: Bonnaroo 2024 with RHCP, Post Malone, Fred again..

<p>Music Festival Lineup Reveal season is officially in full swing, so much so that while we were hyping Boston Calling’s 2024 lineup yesterday (January 9), another mega-fest went live with its own goods. That would be Tennessee’s Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival, which goes down this year June 13 to 16 at the Bonnaroo Farm, situated roughly 60 miles southeast of Nashville in the city of Manchester. Bonnaroo boasts more than 150 performances across 10 stages over its four days of music, and […]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://vanyaland.com/2024/01/10/fest-intentions-bonnaroo-2024-with-rhcp-post-malone-fred-again/">Fest Intentions: Bonnaroo 2024 with RHCP, Post Malone, Fred again..</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://vanyaland.com">Vanyaland</a>.</p>

Teens In Trouble release "Playlist" video, share album details

Teens In Trouble have announced details for their upcoming album. It is called What’s Mine and will be out on March 29 via Asian Man Records. The band has also released a video for their new song “Playlist” which was produced by Lizzie and edited by Ajapopfilms. The video features footage of Lizzie, Mike Park, Bailey Moses of Desert Mambas, Jake Margo of Sweet Gloom, Lucy Giles of Dog Party, and more with their record collections. Teens In Trouble released their split with Desert Mambas earlier this year (read our interview with them right here!) and released their self-titled EP in 2022. Check out the video and tracklist below.

The Baby Seals to release debut album, share "Mild Misogynist" video

Cambridgeshire-based punk band The Baby Seals have announced that they will be releasing their debut album. It is called Chaos and will be out on April 19 via Trapped Animal Records, Green Island Music, and Wipe Out Music Publishing. The band has also released a video for their new song “Mild Misogynist”. The Baby Seals released their self-titled EP in 2017. Check out the video and tracklist below.

DS Exclusive: Listen to The Carmines’ new album “Work Harder Not Smarter” (members of Slick Shoes)

California Ramonescore veterans The Carmines will be releasing their comeback album Work Harder Not Smarter this Thursday. You don’t have to wait any longer to listen to the record though, because we’re hooking you up with this exclusive premiere! Check it out below. Featuring Slick Shoes drummer Joe Nixon and guitarist Greg Togawa, Work Harder […]

California Ramonescore veterans The Carmines will be releasing their comeback album Work Harder Not Smarter this Thursday. You don’t have to wait any longer to listen to the record though, because we’re hooking you up with this exclusive premiere! Check it out below.

Featuring Slick Shoes drummer Joe Nixon and guitarist Greg Togawa, Work Harder Not Smarter sees the Carmines ripping through 10 (very obviously Ramones influenced) new tracks. It’ll keep you pogoing for the entirety of its slightly-less-than-30 minute runtime.

The album is being released on limited edition blue-ish colored vinyl by Memorable But Not Honorable Records and I Buy Records. You’ll be able to buy it very soon here if you’re in the US, and here if you’re in Europe.

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DS Band Spotlight: Meet Sweetie, Chicago’s Local Lipstick-Punk Band

Sweetie is a Chicago-based lipstick-punk band with a femme fatale ferocity and a French influence. Voted a Top 5 Punk Band in the Chicago Reader two years in a row, Sweetie has found a niche in playing shows in the punk scene and drag shows alike, including venues such as the Metro, Green Mill, The […]

Meet Sweetie.

Joe

Bass

Birdy Vee

Guitar and vocals

Ryan

Drums

Sweetie is a Chicago-based lipstick-punk band with a femme fatale ferocity and a French influence. Voted a Top 5 Punk Band in the Chicago Reader two years in a row, Sweetie has found a niche in playing shows in the punk scene and drag shows alike, including venues such as the Metro, Green Mill, The Egyptian Theatre, Reggie’s, Cobra Lounge, Last Rites and Liar’s Club.

Dying Scene is thrilled to interview this local band and talk about drag queens, the queer community, new music releases and some hard-hitting questions that you do not want to miss.


What do you love most about being in Sweetie?

Joe: Honestly, I enjoy the spectacle of our live show. The band is always pushing ourselves to perform our very best and engage with our audience. So many rock songs are pretty simple 3 or 4-chord progressions, but it’s all about the raw power that you play those chords. And raw power is something that Sweetie brings to the table in spades!

Ryan: All the fantastic folks! Making friends with all these incredible bands, venues, and not to mention Birdy and Joe has been an absolute pleasure.

Birdy: I love the wide variety of opportunities to express myself creatively. Writing music is one of my favorite creative outlets, and it is an even bigger high when you take that song you wrote and perform it with your bandmates for the first time. The feeling of that tiny idea turning into such a big sound gives me goosebumps! Also, I ADORE performing. I really love being on stage and interacting with the crowd.

I also love finding new and creative ways for Sweetie to perform. We often perform in spaces that can be considered atypical for a punk band. We’re the house band for the Rocky Horror Picture Show in Dekalb and have performed at countless drag shows. I really like to find ways to take the idea of the typical punk show and elevate it: collaborating with a different variety of artists and performers and giving it that variety show feel.

I also love the connections I have made with people in the scene! I have made some really wonderful friendships with other musicians and performers in the scene, many of whom have been so supportive in so many ways. Sweetie would not exist today without the care and support of these people. AND I LOVE connecting with new people at our shows. I am a huge people-person and love to meet new folks.


How would you describe the music you typically create?

B: If Edith Piaf was reborn as a punk musician, that would be Sweetie. Our music is hyper-emotive, almost to a fault, and is often about love and longing through a female lens, with nods to subculture, queer culture, and the underworld nightlife. All just completely smeared in red lipstick.


Ryan, you were a music major with a heavy background in jazz music…did you ever picture you’d be playing in a glam lipstick punk band?

R: Well, I knew some type of rock band was inevitable, as that’s what came first in my life. I’ve been a jazz guy since high school, and I think that’s really influenced the way I play all styles of music in terms of style, phrasing, improvisation, etc.; so as far as the punk aspect goes, I see the jazz background as an asset to my playing. As far as the “glam lipstick” aspect goes, that’s a new one for me but I’m diggin’ it!



Birdy, you spearheaded the amazing local music fest Hands Off Our Fest (H.O.O.F.), can you tell me more about it, and will we expect it to come back in 2024?

B: Hands Off Our Fest is a music festival celebrating the women, femmes, and thems of the Chicago punk scene, featuring a drag show consisting of some of the area’s finest drag queens, kings, and things. I created this festival to help the women, femmes, thems, and queer folks in the local punk scene to bond with one another, network, and to create space. I have often felt stifled and uncomfortable as a woman in the punk scene, and the feeling can be very isolating. Also, there are so many local femme and queer acts locally that so often get overlooked and replaced with these cis-male fronted bands. I wanted to create a fest to celebrate these amazing talents and voices, while also just having as much fun as possible. The festival was such a success and every time I bump into a fellow HOOF performer when out and about, it’s always such a treat! I’ve definitely made many new friends as a result, and I ABSOLUTELY want to keep this festival going in the years to come. You can DEFINITELY expect HOOF to return in 2024.


Joe, you use an electric bass for your other bands but an upright bass for Sweetie. Any reason why?

J: One of the most important things that I have learned as a hired-gun/studio musician is that you should always serve the song. While there is definitely a level of flash to showing up to a rock gig with an instrument almost matching the size of the drum set, my intention is not to draw away from the songs and compliment them the best I can. I originally joined the group as a “fill in” for a few gigs for the band. When I was sent over demos and videos to learn the songs for these upcoming shows, Birdy was playing a 335/semi-hollow style guitar. This sound instantly brought me back to the classic rockabilly and Elvis records that I loved as a kid, while still being punk rock!

Of course, I showed up to the first band rehearsal/audition with all the songs learned on the electric bass, but I asked about what Birdy thought about me playing upright the next time we got together. I’m pretty sure that her response was, “I’ve never thought about how that would sound, but sure”. I fully believe that she was thinking that I was planning this only for the upcoming show to make it a large surprise spectacle, not that I was dead serious about taking the bass role on this instrument. I also don’t think this instrumental change took too much convincing after hearing it in application and has absolutely shaped some of our own Sweetie sound (even if Birdy changed over to her Flying V guitar).


At your show at The Metro with The Lawrence Arms, you brought out a drag performer (who was fantastic!) and I’ve noticed Sweetie does a lot of stuff related with drag performers. Any reason why?

B: That was my drag mother, Sindy Vicious! Since really early on, Sweetie has been collaborating with drag performers as often as we can. It all started out when we had a residency at a queer comedy variety show called T-Time at the Comedy Shrine (Rest in Peace Comedy Shrine). This was run by Penelope Torres and was a quarterly variety show that featured queer stand-up comedy, drag performances, and music by Sweetie, the resident band for this event. At our very first show, we met drag performer Sindy Vicious, who later approached me with an idea for a music video for our song ‘Devil Girl’. Her and I immediately began working together and this formed a creative collaboration and friendship that has persisted ever since. I am actually in the Haus of Vicious now (a Haus being a drag family in the community) and Vicious is where the Vee in Birdy Vee originates! She directed and edited the video for Devil Girl, Mamma, as well as the music video for our new single, Showgirl. The video also features drag performer and my dear pal, Kai Valentine. I love performing and collaborating with the drag community and hope to continue to do so in the years to come!



You are about to release a new single! What’s the inspiration behind the song?

B: The new single is called ‘Showgirl’, and there is so much inspiration behind this song. Firstly, the title is a nod to the movie Showgirls (1995) which is one of my favorite cult films of all time (after the Rocky Horror Picture Show, of course). At the time that I wrote the song, I was starting to feel the isolation and frustration that can come with being a performer. You are putting your whole heart and all of your energy into this thing, pouring your guts out on stage, and then when it’s all over, what’s left? The song also parallels a relationship that is in the same vein- something that you are pouring your heart into and from which you are getting very little back. But in the song, there’s also that tone of resilience, with a focus on women in the music industry. The stress that women in the music industry are under, and well as the constant criticism that they face can be shattering. The statement of ‘this will not break me’, which a lot of times is easier said than done, helps the song end on a high note. Ultimately, ‘Showgirl’ makes it through and comes out stronger in the end.

When can we expect the next album?

B: The new album is called La Vie en Rouge (which means Life in Red), which is a reference to Edith Piaf’s ‘La Vie en Rose’. The song La Vie en Rose is about being in love and seeing ‘life in pink’. The idea of La Vie en Rouge takes that idea but intensifies it. When you’re seeing life in red, there is passion, there is rage, there is fire. That is what I’m trying to channel in this album. Also, Sweetie’s most recognizable color is red, so the album title is a nod to that as well. We are so proud of this album and it is projected to come out in June 2024.


Now for the hard-hitting questions…would you rather fight one horse-sized duck or 100 duck-sized horses?

J: While I would ideally not like to cause any harm to these proposed majestical creatures. My gut instinct would be to choose the 100 duck-sized horses to see if we may be able to reach some sort of diplomatic resolution without violence. But on the other hand, a horse-sized duck head would look pretty sweet mounted over a fireplace mantle…

R: Horse-sized duck is out of the question. I’m already afraid of geese and they’re not much larger than ducks. On the other hand, what’s a duck-sized horse gonna do? Kick me? Okay.

B: Do I get some sort of weapon? I’m pretty sure I could fight off 100 duck-sized horses with a broom or a hammer or something. But one horse-sized duck? They’ve got all those little teeth and they can fly and hunt you down… But then the 100 duck-horses could kick you to death with their little hooves. If I get a weapon, I’ll choose the little duck-sized horses.

Lastly, if you went on a national tour, how many pairs of pants would you bring with you?

J: My serious answer would probably be 3 to have a solid rotation, but I would be an advocate for shorts (weather dependent) to require less fabric to dirty up and for a higher level of comfort.

R: We don’t believe in that sort of thing.

B: No.


Anything else you want us to know?

B: Women, femmes, thems, and queer folks in the punk and alternative communities need to take up more space in our scene. Keep punk rock queer.



Check out the gallery below for more live photos of Sweetie and be on the look out for their new song release and album!


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Marissa Paternoster and Joe Steinhardt to release graphic novel

Marissa Paternoster of Screaming Females and Noun and Joe Steinhardt have announced the upcoming release of a graphic novel. Merriment is out March 19th, 2024 and is distributed by Microcosm Publishing. Paternoster drew all 200+ pages and Steinhardt wrote the story. As per the book's jacket: "As many of us do, Mack is having a hard time coping with life in New Jersey. Watching her friends figure their lives out while she is stuck living at home, Mack is looking for any kind of lifeline out of her Mom’s house and into the City where she is convinced she will be happy. Then again, it's hard for anyone to be happy these days, a fact her mother will not let her forget. And what's worse: she thinks she might have committed a murder. And that maybe, just maybe, the FBI is spying on her? Merriment follows Mack on her quest for happiness and/or sanity, through the horrors of life, as she navigates existential dread, real life dread, and all the dread in between."

Videos: Gen and The Degenerates: "Kids Wanna Dance"

Gen and The Degenerates have released a video for their new song “Kids Wanna Dance”. The video was created by Matt Chandler Films. The song is off their upcoming debut album Anti-Fun Propaganda which will be out on February 23 via Marshall Records. Gen and The Degenerates released their EP Only Alive When In Motion in 2022. Check out the video below.

Integrity to release rarities collection

Integrity will release a compilation that rounds up rare and unreleased tracks from the past seven years. All Death Is Mine : Total Domination is out via Relapse on February 23. It has 19 tunes culled mostly from the band's recent-ish one-off singles, hyper-limited show only releases, and split EPs. There are also some unreleased remixes. You can hear the entire thing below.

Mean Jeans release new song "Something's Going On"

Mean Jeans have released a new song called “Something’s Going On”. The song is off their upcoming album BLASTED which will be out on February 9 via Fat Wreck Chords. Mean Jeans will be touring Australia with The Chats in February and released Gigantic Sike in 2019. Check out the song below.

Videos: Closet Witch: "Constantly Problematic"

Closet Witch have released a video for their song “Constantly Problematic”. The song is off their album Chiaroscuro which was released in 2023. Check out the video below.