Notable Indie Album Debuts, Vol. III – The Heavns, The Gray Havens, Dunandante, Amity Beach

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The first two Notable Indie Album Debuts posts received a crazy amount of traffic and love on social.

For this series, there are no restrictions on the release date. All that matters is that the debut is strong enough that it simply deserves to be in this category permanently.

In fact, most of these releases were dropped three, four and five years ago. But that doesn’t matter. They are worthy of this space.

With the radical changes to indie rock in recent years, it’s often we reach back into the past recordings because there are so many terrific ones that never received the exposure and love they deserved.

The debut album is an artist’s or band’s first outing, and often full of songs that have been worked on over a number of years, just waiting to spawn. For many artists, the debut is the culmination of a lifetime of experiences, and a window into the artist’s soul.

The following are artists and bands whose debut albums have touched us in some way and stood up to many spins.

The Heavns – San Diego, California
The Gray Havens – Crystal Lake, Illinois
Dunandunate – New York, New York
Amity Beach – Ontario, Canada



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The Heavns – Heavns

San Diego lo-fi musician Vid Glass, who has been recording as The Heavns for six years now, was 22 years old when he released his debut self-titled album.

While it is a lo-fi album, the 10-track recording is chock full of standout tracks; an album that could have been a huge hit with the right exposure. In fact, it is a rare thing to dig almost every song on an LP, but that is, in fact, the case with The Heavns’ debut.

Where does one start when they enjoy almost every – actually every – song on an album. The best advice, in this case, is to encourage the listener to stream the album for herself.

It’s alt. rock. It’s dream-pop. It’s lo-fi, experimental, inspirational, anthemic, and superb. And this reviewer doesn’t throw around such accolades lightly, but they are amplified by the fact that The Heavns was under-the-radar DIY band.

Songs like the romping alt. rock opener, “What I Have”; the longing of “Find Me”; the melodic, emotive slow rocker, “Sapphire,” featuring a mean guitar riff; the warm waves of “Heartbreak Kids”; the mysterious closer, “I Found a Woman,” complete with a classic bluesy and dark rock edge. This Glass dude has serious talents.

There are other memorable songs like “Sweet Nothing,” “Those Were The Days” and “Shadow in the Shade.” Oh, and it cannot go without noting songs like “Waste Away.” We should just say every song on the album.

It may be six years since Glass dropped his self-titled debut, but rest assured, it’s not going anywhere.

In fact, it is one of those types of releases that are so truly indie and DIY – almost like a secret treasure – that we come back to it every once as an example of solid under-the-radar debuts.

In describing his debut not long after its release, Glass wrote to IRC, “I ended up here in Tijuana by myself and I took advantage to write and record as many demos as possible.”

“I found 10 songs that felt like they fit together very well and I decided to drop the debut while I continued working on new music,” Glass said back in 2014. “I usually write several ‘song skeletons’ a day, and choose the best ones to develop and then record a demo.”

“The story behind the name [of my moniker] is a simple one; a few years ago I thought that ’The Heavns’ would be an awesome name for a band. After I begun putting up my demos online, I decided I liked the name and started to use it.”

Thankfully, The Heavns continues to drop new releases right up until last year.



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The Gray Havens – Where Eyes Don’t Go

When we were first turned on to The Gray Havens a few years ago, the indie craze of the mid and late 2000s was starting to fade, and indie was starting to, somehow, become more mainstream.

If the band’s debut album, Where Eyes Don’t Go had dropped five years earlier, it probably would have made the band an indie band to watch across the board, with appearances on Jimmy Kimmel and who knows where else.

That said, you can see from the support the album received on Bandcamp just how good – and popular – of an under-the-radar release it was, and remains to be today.

We must have played the duo’s singles, “Train Station” and “Silver,” a dozen times here in the cafe. “Train Station” was also featured as a Song of the Day via IRC’s Twitter and Facebook.

The Crystal Lake, Illinois husband and wife duo, Dave and Licia Radford successfully funded its 2013 debut album via Kickstarter. The album was recorded in Nashville, TN at ZodLounge Studios.

The Gray Havens creatively use lyrical imagery set to catchy indie and folk-pop melodies. It is the couple’s deep and thoughtful lyrics and stories that shore up this debut as notable, without question, and as it shows on Bandcamp, and elsewhere, many others agree.

The duo’s musical influences include Katie Herzig, The Civil Wars, Jamie Cullum, Regina Spektor, and Jenny and Tyler.



Dunandunate – The Art and Science of Existence

As a professional musician and multi-instrumentalist, New York artist Rob Benny takes instrumental music to new heights with his unconventional approach to recording. The results are dazzling.

Dunandunate is Benny’s all-instrumental project that he describes as “built on texture-based music with cinematic, atmospheric, and heavily syncopated sensibilities.” We’d have to agree whole-heartedly.

Formed in 2016, Dunandunate’s debut album, The Art and Science of Existence, is an impressive instrumental work from the opening track to the closer. It’s a spectacular ride; it’s not every week that we hear something as intricate and beautiful as this debut.

The project was formed by Benny to create “music that is vivid, enlightening, inspirational, and intriguing.”

From the uplifting opening track, “A Late Night in November,” and the funk-R&B inspired “Alone in a Crowd of 1,000 Acquaintances” to the unforgettable, “Idyllic Moonlight” (video above); the soft, upbeat jazzy, “Driving Through A Thunderstorm,” and the inspirational, “As Summer Comes to a Sullen Conclusion,” not to mention the standout closer, “Epiphany,” this album is definitely not elevator new age music for yoga. Not in the least.

Spurred and informed by an eclectic taste in music from the past and present, and mixing many genres from his kit of sounds, Benny captures various core elements of atmospheric rock, pop, prog, psych, and cinematic post-rock and bakes them into one compelling and distinct collection of songs. Without being cheesey.

His musical influences include The Cure, Tears For Fears, Anathema, Lights & Motion, Marillion, Peter Gabriel.



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Amity Beach – Bonfire Etiquette

Based in Ontario, Canada, the teenage (at the time) indie pop band, Amity Beach, have somehow escaped the kind of popularity that their music deserves, especially after the release of their debut LP, Bonfire Etiquette, in 2013.

With flourishes of jangly guitars, sunny keyboards, and bright synth riffs, uptempo, thumping bass and energetic drumming on tracks like “Crown Victoria” and the summertime anthem of “Sunday Nights To Infinity,” with its embracing of 1960s-style pop rock, even if they don’t necessarily realize it.

As purveyors of infectious indie dance beats and big, sweeping orchestral pop melodies, the members of Amity Beach hit it out of the park with its fantastic debut. And like many orchestral indie pop bands, the band also makes use of instruments such as the glockenspiel, bari sax, trumpet and French horn throughout the EP.

Other standout songs include the exuberant “Crown Victoria”; the inviting, driving beats, bari sax and twinkling glockenspiel of the unforgettable “Avalanches”; the wonder and guitar jamming of “Born in the Daylight,” and an exhilarating cover version of “Right Back Where We Started From,” written by J. Vincent Edwards and Pierre Tubbs, and made popular in 1976 by Maxine Nightingale.

There really is not a song on Bonfire Etiquette that we don’t like. If you listen to this album a few times over a couple of weeks, you may realize how under the radar Amity Beach has been since 2013 – when the band could have been riding high on the indie orchestral pop wave craze.

According to the band, the P is “an exploration of the perils, pitfalls, and pleasures of juvenescence.” We have actually listened to, and enjoyed, this album a number of times over the years.

The talented band members include Geoff Baillie (lead vocals, guitar, glockenspiel, bari sax); Andrew Gill (backing vocals, guitar, trumpet, French horn); Fraser Moore (bass); Jordan Hansen (drums); and Grayson Homuth (keyboards, synthesizer).

Guest performances included appearances by the band First Rate People and artist Mikey Chuck Rivers. The album was produced by Matt Weston (Broken Teeth, Icewater) and mastered by Noah Mintz (The National, Broken Social Scene).

Amity Beach has previously opened for bands like Dinosaur Bones, The Balconies, Les Stroud, and The Walkervilles, with top musical influences including The Talking Heads, R.E.M. and Modest Mouse.

Sadly, the band has not released an album since Bonfire Etiquette and the last post on their Facebook page is from 2014.

https://amitybeach.bandcamp.com/album/bonfire-etiquette





Notable Indie Rock Debut Albums, Vol. I – Nopes, CapCapCap, Seed of Freedom, Shirt/Pants and Umbrella Cult

This new series of notable indie rock debuts highlights standout first releases from DIY artists and bands that few underground listeners have heard (yet).

As part of this series, there is no time-stamp requirement; meaning the debuts we feature range from those dropped recently to a few years ago. What matters is the music. Always. And what has also always mattered -in a big way – to IRC and its audience is unveiling and promoting of talented indie artists and bands that cross our radar screens.

In this latest edition, you’ll find bands from close and faraway places like California, The Netherlands, Russia, Washington DC and Florida.

We’ve chosen some of the top singles from each of the debuts featured in this post playlist. If you like what you hear, please show your love for the artists and IRC by sharing it with friends.

If you have music that needs to be heard, submit to Indie Rock Cafe. Keep independent music alive and out of reach of the corporate henchmen.

In This Installment:

Nopes – Oakland, California
CapCapCap – Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Seed of Freedom – Moscow, Russia
Shirt/Pants – Washington, DC
Umbrella Cult – Sarasota, Florida




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Nopes – Oakland, California

San Francisco Bay Area band Nopes bangs out noisy bubblegum punk music that juxtaposes two otherwise polar opposite genres and smashes them together into a swirl of manic noise pop.

“Generally, we love pop melodies just as much as we love dissonance and noise,” says bassist Kevin Quijivix. “So on any given Nopes’ song, those two elements battle out and harmonize in sync.”

This is evident on standout songs like “Matinee at Market” and “Jingle Berries” from the Oakland band’s fantastic debut EP, Nectar of the Dogs, originally dropped in June 2015, and which received a solid amount of support on Bandcamp.

In reply to ‘what is indie rock’: “Calling your music indie rock has absolutely no meaning,” Quijivix asserts. “In the 1980s and 90s, however, indie rock was the direct alternative to mainstream media, more in line with punk music than guitar pop in terms of DIY ethos.”

The band’s BC page lays it out like this is:

Stereo-fed on the blood and sweat of early Californian punk history, a period which barfed forth influential pre-hardcore/pro-punk provocateurs like The Germs, Angry Samoans and The Dead Kennedys, Oakland’s Nopes spring from similar Suburbian dungeons, hearts burning with the fun and fury of being young, gifted and ultimately unaccountable.

Nopes has opened for bands like Diesel Dudes, Slothes, Toy Guitar, Sexless, Mall Walk, and Toner, and counts among their major influences artists like Guided By Voices, Dead Kennedys, R.E.M., Husker Du, and Pissed Jeans.

The EP was recorded by Jack Shirley (Deafheavan, Boss-De-Nage) at the Atomic Garden Recording Studio in East Palo Alto, California and mastered by Will Killingsworth (Orchid, Ampere, Bucket Full of Teeth).

Nopes on Facebook



CapCapCap – Sonder

We don’t know much about the interestingly-named indie band, CapCapCap, stationed in Eindhoven, The Netherlands, but we do know that they craft gloomy, simmering indie rock with elements of alt. rock on the debut LP, Sonder.

CapCapCap’s music, as heard on top tracks like the ethereal, “Kerozan,” and the experimental, “Heads,” is soaked in dark, wavy synthesizers, looping guitar effects, electronic drums, and computer samples. The vocals of guitarist Lydia Roos are familiar yet still her own; her vocals fit the music nicely and are kind of spooky and comforting at the same time. Think Beach House meets Portishead.

The band’s dark post-rock sound has more vocals and less instrumentation than most post-rock bands, but then again, we wouldn’t say that CapCapCap is necessarily post-rock per se.

According to the band, they are genre-blenders, bringing together elements of 80’s new wave, rock, post rock, and trip-hop. On songs like “Heads,” dark synths, driving drums repetitive guitar lines and layered vocals drive it forward.

Lead guitarist Job Huberts explains the album and the album title this way: “The days become darker, people start huddling together, each and every one of them living their own lives, passing you by, being a part of your life for just this tiny moment in time.”

The other band members that make up the quartet are bassist Thijs Meulendijks and drummer and sample master Thijs Brok.

CapCapCap have opened for bands like Interpol, Gosto, the Horn the Hunt, and Mmoths. The band’s top influences include Portishead, The Sound, Warpaint, Viet Cong, and Sonic Youth.

CapCapCap on Facebook



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Seed of Freedom – Revolt

It’s not often that a band from Russia sounds as western as does Moscow‘s indie band Seed of Freedom on their under-the-radar debut EP, Revolt, released in October of 2015.

The five-track EP is brimming with dreamy tracks that are too good to ignore, including the glimmering lo-fi psych rock of the unforgettable, “Time Machine,” and the twinkling dream pop and angling guitars of “Put The Gold In My Bag.”

These are just two of the memorable tracks from this notable indie debut out of western Russia. Why more indie/DIY music lovers didn’t hear this EP is a mystery other than to say the band (as happens to so many great bands) just didn’t have the publicity and promotion they needed behind it.

The band members are three brothers – Benjamin Ivanov (vocals, guitar); Jackob Ivanov (guitar) and Philipp Ivanov (drums), plus Marco Boccamazzo (bass, keys).

SoF’s polished sound is clearly influenced by some of their top musical influences such as Foals, Tame Impala and Arctic Monkeys, but even more so by their love of retro dream pop that has been prevalent in Europe for decades.

MP3: “Put The Gold In My Bag“Seed of Freedom from Revolt

Seed of Freedom on Facebook



Shirt/Pants – Save Your Lungs For Cigarettes

When Washington, DC noise/garage rock punk surf band Shirt/Pants first debuted in 2015 with the EP, Save Your Lungs For Cigarettes, we took notice. The teens/early 20-somethings had been rocking venues up and down the east coast with their gritty, lo-fi, genre-blending tracks like the anthemic “Knockoff”; the spaghetti-western-inspired, “Haze & Ginger”; and the punk fueled track, “Slacker.”

Other times, such as on the track, “Nadsat,” the band incorporates indie pop cloaked in wonderful, lo-fi noise. Shirt/Pants has opened for bands like Twin Peaks, Frontiers, Dolly Spartans, Two Inch Astronaut, and count their biggest musical influences as Together Pangea, Ty Segall, Arctic Monkeys, The Orwells, and King Krule.

MP3: “Knockoff“Shirt/Pants from Save Your Lungs For Cigarettes

Shirt/Pants on Facebook



Umbrella Cult – Apocalove

Back in 2012, Sarasota, Florida DIY band Umbrella Cult released an impressive debut album Apocalove, featuring a collection of standout tracks, including the indie rock tracks, “Another One Goes,” “Take Us Home” and “New Mistakes,” among others.

In 2011 and 2012, the band’s gritty, lo-fi production style and high energy concerts quickly garnered a strong and loyal fan base in their hometown and the surrounding region.

It was during this time that the band soon began work on an entirely self-produced album in the foreclosed childhood home of one of the band members and started calling themselves ‘Umbrella Cult’ and the sessions the “Foreclosed Sessions,” resulting in the recording of more than 30 songs – 14 of which made it on the album. The album is a trip through sonic landscapes, unlike many debuts we’ve heard recently.

UC purposely embraces the “raw and reverb-y production of the 60’s and 70’s,” to create a sound that is balanced by modern and vintages aesthetics while retaining a retro rock edge.

Their songs range from indie radio hits (“New Mistakes”), and songs which are yearning pop (“Take Us Home”), oddly cinematic (“Theme From Apocalove”), and ethereal ballads (“Jane”) to snotty trash rock (“Sue Aside”), lo-fi dream states (“Letter to the Unaddressed”) and a prevalent nostalgic, heavily vintage sound (“Blue & Green”) of the 1960s and ‘70s.

Umbrella Cult on Spotify



5 New DIY Debuts You’ve Gotta Hear – GRRL PAL, The Citie, Tigers In The Sky, Stereo Twins, Three Witches

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The spring of 2015 is certainly revealing a stream of exciting and promising new DIY artists and bands. Recent posts like Best New DIY Music of 2015, Best New Album Releases, Artist of the Week, among others, present dozens of songs and albums to listen to and artists and bands to watch.

In this first installment of a new series, 5 New DIY Debuts You’ve Gotta Hear – a spin-off of the long-running, popular 7 Bands You’ve Gotta Hear – you’ll hear songs from some of the most impressive 2015 DIY debut releases by under the radar artists, including three duos; GRRL PAL, a girl-boy electro synth duo from the western shores of Australia; Tigers In The Sky, a boy-girl-romantically-involved pop duo from the west coast of California; Stereo Twins, a Baltimore power pop duo helmed by identical twin brothers. You’ll also read about and listen to The Citie, a talented ‘City of Angels’ outfit consisting of four brothers, one sister and one family friend, and Three Witches, an Ohio power pop rock trio of two brothers and a friend.

In This Installment:

  • GRRL PAL – Perth, Australia
  • The Citie – Los Angeles, California
  • Tigers In The Sky – Los Angeles, California
  • Stereo Twins – Baltimore, Maryland
  • Three Witches – Akron, Ohio
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GRRL PAL – Paradise EP

From Perth, Australia, the girl boy synth electro pop duo GRRL PAL have become somewhat of a mini Internet sensation over the past six months thanks to a series of singles the duo has been dropping once a month since last November. The first single in the series was the title track from their debut EP, Paradise (officially released in April).

“Paradise” sparkles and shines and pops, making it almost irresistible to spin again and again, which partly explains how it has accumulated more than 187,000 streams on GRRL PAL’s Soundcloud page, plus over 1,000 ‘hearts’ and more than 100 comments from music lovers in Australia and across the globe.

Producer and multi-instrumentalist Danny K and vocalist Jay LeKat began recording in a small bedroom in 2013 before the local scene in Perth got wind of their music earlier last year. The duo’s songs are glistening, shiny synth pop compositions propelling off of K’s production skills and LeKat’s intoxicating vocals. Think Grimes with more cream and sugar.

A number of the duo’s singles, including the dreamy “Paradise,” as well as “DARE” and “NGHT,” have been on regular rotation on Australia’ Triple J Unearthed, a top music radio program Down Under. Just a couple of weeks ago, “DARE” was voted one of Buzzfeed‘s 99 Best Songs of 2015 (So Far). The newest single from the EP, “Radar,” was just crowned one of Soundcloud’s Top 100 Free Songs this month.

According to LeKat, “Radar” was “written about crushing on a cute guy and enticing him into luuurving you, TAY TAY style.” We’re not quite sure exactly what that means, but it doesn’t matter – the song, just like the duo’s other tracks on the EP, speaks for itself. GRRL PAL are well poised to become one of the next big things to come out the growing Australian DIY/indie music scene.

“Radar“GRRL PAL from Paradise EP – April 17th

“Paradise“GRRL PAL from Paradise EP

GRRL PAL on Facebook

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The Citie – The Citie

The Los Angeles based DIY band, The Citie, with their infectious hooks and funky rhythms, craft captivating songs that depict real life triumphs and tragedies in their lives. Starting out in 2010, the ‘close knit family’ of five young artists have burned the midnight oil and sacrificed much, to relay stories with sounds that many young adults can relate to. All of the members are siblings except for one good friend of the family.

Over the past few years, The Citie have attracted a following and created a little buzz in LA, which itself is no small feat in a city that probably has more bands and artists per capita than any other city in the U.S. The Citie have performed acclaimed shows at some of LA’s most prized venues, including the famous House of Blues. Reviews have applauded the band’s energetic and lively shows. And the band is fully DIV – from the writing and recording of their songs to setting up shows and mastering final cuts.

The band members include vocalist Sofia Cohen (vocals), Jona Cohen (drums/vocals), Adrian Cohen (lead guitar), Daniel Cohen (bass), and Casey Sandino (rhythm guitar), and count among their top musical influences to include U2, Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, Radiohead, Coldplay, and Muse.

“Baltimore”The Citie (featuring Addict)

Just a few weeks ago, The Citie dropped a new and very timely song called, “Baltimore,” that addresses the problems of urban strife and police brutality in Baltimore. We like the track so much that it was recently a Song of the Day on IRC. The fact that they added LA rapper Addict, made the song even more poignant and authentic. We’ll be the first to listen to their next single and would encourage them to work on another song with with Addict. “The City of Lost Hope” is a grooving funk pop track. “Snowflakes,” is clearly different from their most recent single, but that’s part of the allure of their debut LP, out now.

City of Lost HopeThe Citie from The Citie – April 10th

SnowflakesThe Citie from The Citie

The Citie official website

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Tigers In The Sky – Golden Lights EP

Tigers In The Sky is an eye-opening, ear-catching DIY folk-pop boyfriend/girlfriend duo from the Hawaiian island of Oahu. The duo has largely flown under the radar for a few years, until now. TITS’ introspective, playful and cheerful songs manage to capture the breezy, subtle beauty of their island surroundings with bright acoustic guitar rhythms, steel pedal infusions, piano flourishes, soaring violins, horns and gentle drum beats.

Multi-instrumentalist and vocalist Lionel-Keone DeGuzman and vocalist Casey Liu, who met some four years ago, blend and mix gorgeous vocals and choruses magnificently on geographically-centric tracks like the foot-tapping and transformative song, “Mexico,” and the soothing single, “Paris,” two of the standout songs from the couples’ debut EP, Golden Lights.

Tigers In The Sky raised the money to record, mix and master Golden Lights on Kickstarter, thanks to a small, but loyal, following. Recently relocating to Los Angeles from Oahu, Tigers In The Sky is clearly a band to watch in 2015. Clearly, DeGuzman and Liu have something special going; the enthralling, intricate and warm compositions and cheerful melodies on Golden Lights will bring a smile to your face and tug at your heart strings. Think Lord Huron meets Beach House. What a discovery! Golden Lights was released on March 24th. The duo list their musical influences as Head and the Heart, Miniature Tigers, Jack Johnson, Lord Huron, and Telekinesis.

“Mexico“Tigers In The Sky from Golden Lights

“Paris“Tigers In The Sky from Golden Lights

Tigers In The Sky on Facebook

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Stereo Twins – Good News

Identical twin brothers Brandt Huseman (vocals, bass, drums, keys) and Matt Huseman (vocals, guitar, keys), formerly founding members of Baltimore bands The Greenberry Woods and Splitsville, decided last year to strike out on their own and form the new power pop duo, Stereo Twins.

As twins, they’ve discovered over the years that they have very similar tastes in music, and yet just enough small differences, that they can each contribute to Stereo Twins equally. In fact, their new duo is just a continuation of a “lifelong musical partnership” with the pursuit to create songs with “strong melodies, punchy choruses, and soaring harmonies,” as is evident on their debut album, Good News, featuring terrific tracks like the harmonies and hooks of “Stars Shine” and the Greenberry Woods-ish “Mariamne.” Their musical influences include Neil Finn, Teenage Fanclub, Big Star, Neil Young, Paul McCartney, and XTC. Damn good and diverse taste in music.

“Stars Shine“Stereo Twins from Good News – Jan. 20th

“Mariamne“Stereo Twins from Good News

Stereo Twins on Facebook

Three Witches – Three Witches EP

The Akron, Ohio DIY trio, Three Witches, have a uniquely goofy view of the world and their place in it. “We’re just three college graduates that want to make cool music and tour around the world instead of having to get real jobs.” And they might just have a shot. The band members (two brothers and one good friend) – Zachary ‘Wacky Zachy’ Manning (vocals, guitar), Sean ‘The Lawn’ Manning (drums, guitar, vocals), and Nick ‘The Stick’ Schirripa (bass, guitar) – have served up some pretty awesome tracks – like the upbeat lo-fi and quirky power pop of “WD Hamilton” and the Pavement-like mysticism on “Poltergeist” – from their recently released, self-titled debut EP. They have previously opened for bands like Bad Hounds and HOLA MESA, and are fans of The Smashing Pumpkins, The Strokes, Bloc Party, Saves the Day, and Foals.

Since the indie pop rock trio officially formed last year, they’ve been recording tracks in their basement, using ‘bottom-of-the-line’ microphones with ‘top-of-the-line’ guitars and amps, MIDI controllers and Logic Pro X. “We live together in Akron, work at crappy jobs, play music and eat a lot of chicken,” brother Zachary said. “Because of this, our George Foreman grill is our most prized possession. We don’t really know what we’re doing when it comes to recording so we just make everything sound as good as we can before deciding something is done.” The band contends that their ultimate goal is to create “the musical equivalent of the George Foreman grill – innovative, timeless, revolutionary and fucking awesome.” What the guys got cooking so far smells pretty damn good.

“WD Hamilton“ – Three Witches from Three Witches EP

“Poltergeist“ – Three Witches from Three Witches EP