Review: Shopping – All or Nothing

London post-punkers Shopping slid into the last few days of 2019 by releasing one of my favorites singles of the year, “Initiative.” That track brought back their crisp, “cold water skipping across a hot pan” fun sound and also indicated something more…something that was somehow extra cripsy.

That turned out to be their newest album, All or Nothing. The band (Rachel Aggs – guitar and vocals, Billy Easter – bass and vocals, and Andrew Milk – drums and vocals) had split apart geographically (Aggs and Milk in Glasgow, Easter in Los Angeles) but got together in Seattle to record “Initiative” and then the rest of the album came together in a ten-day period recording in London and Glasgow. The title of the album refers to not only their “go for it / we’re not screwing around” approach to the rapid recording process, but also the pop production of the record, bringing in more synths, changing up guitar styles, and sharing lead vocals through several tracks.

The album has plenty of political jabs, queer power cuts, and plenty of encouragement to live your life in truth and have a good time doing it. The opener, “Trust in Us,” is both a middle finger to the 1% and a rallying cry to the 99% to trust and rely on each other instead of embracing the myth that billionaires know what’s best for us. The song has a bit of a Yeah Yeah Yeahs vibe to it, which isn’t surprising since Shopping has admitted that YYY’s, LCD Soundsystem, Bronksi Beat, and Talking Heads were all major influences on the record.

“Initiative” follows with its snappy beats and fun lyrics about dealing with the daily work grind. The song would’ve been featured on the Office Space soundtrack had it been released in 1999. The bass heavy “Follow Me” (and Easter’s killer bass is all over this album) is up next. “Follow me, I’ll make it worth it,” Aggs sings. “CCTV is living for me,” Milk replies. London, it should be noted, has more CCTV cameras than most major cities on Earth, so I can’t help but wonder if the song is about doing goofy stuff just in public just to make those watching the cameras have plenty of “WTF?” moments at their desks.

Milk takes lead vocals on “No Apologies,” a killer cut abut realizing that a relationship is going down a dark, possibly dangerous path and that waiting for an apology is wasted, useless time. “For Your Pleasure” is probably filling dance floors in clubs all over London and Glasgow and L.A. by now with its bright synths and Milk’s wild beats that are seem to trip over each other and yet never get out of time.

His beats are like a kitchen timer on “About You,” and Aggs’ guitar seems to be playing in another room as she sings about problems in her relationship with her lover that she doesn’t want to admit are probably her fault, at least in part. The LCD Soundsystem influence is clear on “Lies” with its synth bass and hand percussion as Aggs and Easter sing a plea about trying to convince their respective lovers of simple truths.

“Expert Advice” brings back Aggs’ funky guitar work and Milk’s lead vocals. Milk and Aggs sing about being frustrated with someone close to them, but I can’t help thinking the song is also aimed at political figures (“You keep selling me the same old story…”) trying to convince everyone in Britain that Brexit will be great for everyone involved. The slightly down-tuned guitar on “Body Clock” is a pleasant surprise, and the title and final track is a tale of a relationship in which one half (Aggs, in this case) is doing the majority of the work and simply wants more from her lover or to call it quits.

All or Nothing is a solid record from beginning to end, with Shopping exploring new song structures and instrumentation, but keeping their sharp lyrics and only getting better as musicians.

Keep your mind open.

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Shopping’s new single is “For Your Pleasure.”

Photo by Matt Draper

Shopping releases a new single/video, “For Your Pleasure,” from All Or Nothing, their new album out February 7th via FatCat Records. The songs that make up All or Nothing are the band’s boldest yet; confident, elastic, streamlined grooves that crackle with energy and intention. Along with cleaner, new production values, ‘80s synths and electronic percussion add new textures to their signature minimalist dynamic. Following the “bright and jangly” (Stereogum) lead single “Initiative,” ”For Your Pleasure” is frenetic and propulsive. The accompanying video was directed by Lessa Millet and features several notable musicians,  including Sam SparroJanelane, and members of OughtFrench Vanilla and Mo Dotti.


Watch Video for Shopping’s “For Your Pleasure” –
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9pBOBhq0DHQ

 
“‘For Your Pleasure’ is a song about frustration, the feeling of always wanting more, needing material things to distract or gratify us,” says Shopping. “It’s about consumerism but also searching for meaning in life. That feeling of longing that never really goes away even when you have the things, the job, the status or the person you thought you wanted. I think people who create music or art know what that feels like particularly.” 

Director Lessa Millet elaborates: “When I first heard the song I immediately felt like it had this amazing gay club anthem quality. I think dressing up, looking fabulous, and going to a party to dance and be surrounded by other fabulously dressed queers and weirdos is a huge part of this community. It’s this thing that sometimes is lacking in your everyday life, but you get to have it in these special places. To feel great about who you are, and feel loved and seen and understood. I wanted the video to be honest and authentic. Everyone in the video is basically playing themselves.”

To write All Or Nothing, guitarist Rachel Aggs (Trash Kit, Sacred Paws), drummer Andrew Milk (Current Affairs), and Billy Easter (Wet Dog) returned to London for an intense, 10-day period. Then, they teamed up with US-based producers Davey Warsop to record and Nick Sylvester to mix the record in Los Angeles. All Or Nothing sees Shopping experiment further with the sonic additions that coloured 2018’s The Official Body, shifting their stripped-down ethos to one that took a leap into pop production. The trio’s vision – deeply queer; political by default – place them in a radical lineage of dance, a continuum connecting disco and post-punk to Chicago house and EDM. 

Following shows in the UK next month, Shopping will bring their live show stateside in March. Tickets are available now and all dates can be found below. 
 

Watch Video For Shopping’s “Initiative” –
https://youtu.be/8Owoq6vVkUs

Pre-order All Or Nothing:
https://fat-cat.co.uk/release/shopping/all-or-nothing

Shopping Tour Dates (new dates in bold):
Fri. Feb. 7 – London, UK @ Rough Trade East
Sun. Feb. 9 – Bristol, UK @ Rough Trade Bristol
Mon. Feb. 10 – Nottingham, UK @ Rough Trade Nottingham
Thu. March 5 – Portland, OR @ Mississippi Studios *
Fri. March 6 – Seattle, WA @ Sunset Tavern *
Sat. March 7 – Vancouver, BC @ The Biltmore *
Mon. March 9 – Reno, NV @ Holland Project * 
Tue. March 10 – San Francisco, CA @ Rickshaw Stop *
Wed. March 11 – Los Angeles, CA @ 1720 *
Thu. March 12 – San Diego, CA @ UCSD *
Sat. March 14 – Tucson, AZ @ Club Congress (Spring Thing) *
Mon. March 16 – Sat. March 21 – Austin, TX @SXSW
Sat. March 21 – Dallas, TX @ The Blue Light (Not So Fun Wknd)
Mon. March 23 – Tallahassee, FL @ The Bark *
Tue. March 24 – Atlanta, GA @ The Masquerade – Purgatory *
Wed. March 25 – Durham, NC @ The Pinhook *
Thu. March 26 – Washington, DC @ DC9 *
Fri. March 27 – Philadelphia, PA @ Boot & Saddle *
Sat. March 28 – Brooklyn, NY @ Elsewhere *
Sun. March 29 – Portsmouth, NH @ The Press Room *
Tue. March 31 – Toronto, ON @ The Monarch *
Thu. April 2 – Detroit, MI @ Deluxx Fluxx *
Fri. April 3 – Fort Wayne, IN @ The Brass Rail *
Sat. April 4 – Chicago, IL @ Subterranean *
Sun. April 5 – Minneapolis, MN @ 7th Street Entry *
Tue. April 7 – St. Louis, MO @ Sinkhole *
Wed. April 8 – Lawrence, KS @ White Schoolhouse *
Thu. April 9 – Denver, CO @ Hi Dive *
Fri. April 10 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Kilby Court *
Wed. April 29 – Edinburgh, UK @ Sneaky Pete’s
Thu. April 30 – Leeds, UK @ Brudenell Social Club
Fri. May 1 – Glasgow, UK @ Audio

Tue. May 5 – London, UK @ The Lexington
Wed. May 6 – Paris, FR @ Supersonic
Fri. May 8 – Utrecht, NL @ ACU
Sat. May 9 – Hamburg, DE @ Molotow (SkyBar)
Sun. May 10 – Copenhagen, DK @ VEGA Ideal Bar
Mon. May 11 – Berlin, DE @ Urban Spree
Wed. May 13 – Leipzig, DE @ TBA
Thu. May 14 – Vienna, AT @ Fluc Café
Fri. May 15 – Prague, CZ @ Meetfactory
Sat. May 16 – Munich, DE @ Milla
Sun. May 17 – Bern, CH @ Reitschule/Rössli
Tue. May 19 – Winterhur, CH @ Albani
Thu. May 21 – Luxembourg, LU @ De Gudde Wellen
Fri. May 22 – Cologne, DE @ Bumann & Sohn
Sat. May 23 – Offenbach, DE @ Hafen 2

* = w/ Automatic

Keep your mind open.

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Top 20 singles of 2019: #’s 15 – 11

We’re almost to the halfway point. Who’s in the top 15?

#15 – Sisters of Your Sunshine Vapor – “Godshe”

Detroit’s Sisters of Your Sunshine Vapor released four singles this year, and this was my favorite. It’s bright, trippy, and moves along like a sports car set on cruise control.

#14 – Diagonal – “Negatives”

I’m calling it now. These Chicago shoe gazers are on track to be one of the Next Big Things. This cut blends psychedelia with shoe gaze and we’re all better for it.

#13 – Claude Fontaine – “Pretending He Was You”

Half of this album is dub, and the other half is bossa nova. All of it is good, and this was the first song I heard from it. I swooned.

#12 – Shopping – “Initiative”

Post-punkers Shopping slipped into the end of 2019 with one of the best singles of the year, poking fun at the rat race and The Man with a ripping bass line, typewriter-precise drumming, and that skittering guitar work only they can seem to play.

#11 – Public Practice – “Disposable”

Speaking of post-punk, Public Practice do it very, very well indeed. This single was a delightful treat in the latter half of 2019 and bodes well for hopefully a full album ahead.

We’re onto the top 10 tomorrow!

Keep your mind open.

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Shopping slide into the end of 2019 with one of the sharpest singles of the year – “Initiative.”

Photo by Matt Draper

Shopping announce All Or Nothing, their new album out February 7th on FatCat Records, and present the video for lead single, “Initiative.” Following 2018’s The Official Body, the songs that make up All or Nothing are the band’s boldest yet; confident, elastic, streamlined grooves that crackle with energy and intention. The trio’s vision – deeply queer; political by default – place them in a radical lineage of dance, a continuum connecting disco and post-punk to Chicago house and EDM. 

Storming lead single “Initiative” was written in a Seattle basement. Like the album as a whole, the track thrums with purpose, marking a confident new phase for the band. Referencing  governments who shirk responsibilities but place the blame on individuals, the song has a frustrated groove that’s propelling, motivated by necessity to keep going against the grain. The accompanying video, directed by Jack Barraclough, is brightly-stylized, and stars the band themselves. 
 

Watch Video For “Initiative” – 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Owoq6vVkUs


Though the band members now live countries away from each other – guitarist Rachel Aggs (Trash Kit, Sacred Paws) and drummer Andrew Milk (Current Affairs) in Glasgow and Billy Easter (Wet Dog) in Los Angeles – the trio returned to London for an intense, 10-day period. For All Or Nothing, they teamed up with US-based producer Davey Warsop to record, shifting their stripped-down ethos to one that took a leap into pop production. Talking Heads, YYYs, Bronski Beat and LCD Soundsystem are among the artists to feature on the production inspo playlist the band created for Nick Sylvester, who mixed the record, in Los Angeles.

Along with cleaner, new production values, All Or Nothing sees Shopping experiment further with the sonic additions that coloured The Official Body. Jubilantly ‘80s synths and electronic percussion add new textures to their signature minimalist dynamic. 

Four albums in, Shopping are as committed and focused as ever, regardless of any distance. “We found ourselves singing about being true to yourself, in an often binary and belligerent digital age, and reclaiming agency when it feels like our personal freedom and privacy is constantly eroding.”  In an era dominated by spin and surveillance, All Or Nothing invites us to remember what really moves us, in dance and in life. 
 

All Or Nothing Tracklist:
1. All Or Nothing
2. Initiative
3. Follow Me
4. No Apologies
5. For Your Pleasure
6. About You
7. Lies
8. Expert Advice
9. Body Clock
10. Trust In Us

Shopping Tour Dates:
Fri. Feb. 7 – London, UK @ Rough Trade East
Sun. Feb. 9 – Bristol, UK @ Rough Trade Bristol
Mon. Feb. 10 – Nottingham, UK @ Rough Trade Nottingham
Thu. March 5 – Portland, OR @ Mississippi Studios *
Fri. March 6 – Seattle, WA @ Sunset Tavern *
Sat. March 7 – Vancouver, BC @ The Biltmore *
Mon. March 9 – Reno, NV @ Holland Project * 
Tue. March 10 – San Francisco, CA @ Rickshaw Stop *
Wed. March 11 – Los Angeles, CA @ 1720 *
Thu. March 12 – San Diego, CA @ UCSD *
Sat. March 14 – Tucson, AZ @ Club Congress (Spring Thing) *
Mon. March 16 – Sat. March 21 – Austin, TX @SXSW
Mon. March 23 – Tallahassee, FL @ The Bark *
Tue. March 24 – Atlanta, GA @ The Masquerade – Purgatory *
Wed. March 25 – Durham, NC @ The Pinhook *
Thu. March 26 – Washington, DC @ DC9 *
Fri. March 27 – Philadelphia, PA @ Boot & Saddle *
Sat. March 28 – Brooklyn, NY @ Elsewhere *
Sun. March 29 – Portsmouth, NH @ The Press Room *
Tue. March 31 – Toronto, ON @ The Monarch *
Thu. April 2 – Detroit, MI @ Deluxx Fluxx *
Fri. April 3 – Fort Wayne, IN @ The Brass Rail *
Sat. April 4 – Chicago, IL @ Subterranean *
Sun. April 5 – Minneapolis, MN @ 7th Street Entry *
Tue. April 7 – St. Louis, MO @ Sinkhole *
Wed. April 8 – Lawrence, KS @ White Schoolhouse *
Thu. April 9 – Denver, CO @ Hi Dive *
Fri. April 10 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Kilby Court *
Tue. May 5 – London, UK @ The Lexington
Wed. May 6 – Paris, FR @ Supersonic
Fri. May 8 – Utrecht, NL @ ACU
Sat. May 9 – Hamburg, DE @ Molotow (SkyBar)
Sun. May 10 – Copenhagen, DK @ VEGA Ideal Bar
Mon. May 11 – Berlin, DE @ Urban Spree
Thu. May 14 – Vienna, AT @ Fluc Café
Fri. May 15 – Prague, CZ @ Meetfactory
Sat. May 16 – Munich, DE @ Milla
Sun. May 17 – Bern, CH @ Reitschule/Rössli
Tue. May 19 – Winterhur, CH @ Albani
Thu. May 21 – Luxembourg, LU @ De Gudde Wellen
Sat. May 23 – Offenbach, DE @ Hafen 2

* = w/ Automatic

Pre-order All Or Nothing – 
https://fat-cat.co.uk/release/shopping/all-or-nothing

Keep your mind open.

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Top 30 Albums of 2018: #’s 20 – 16

We’ve reached the top 20!

#20: Diagonal – Tomorrow – My wife doesn’t really like shoegaze music. She just doesn’t get it. This record, however, made her say she might grow to like shoegaze. I can’t write a better recap than that.

#19: Blackwater Holylight (self-titled) – This debut from these dark psych rockers has sexy goth touches, doom riffs, and psychedelic flair that made it high on my list this year.

#18: Neko Case – Hell-On – Case’s latest is another beautiful record of masterful songwriting, sometimes heartbreaking lyrics, and plenty of folk, Americana, and outlaw touches.

#17: Shopping – The Official Body – This post-punk fun-fest is poppy, peppy, and punky. It’s fun from beginning to end.

#16: Terminal Mind – Recordings – Speaking of punk, this reissue of rare material from Austin, Texas punk legends Terminal Mind was a great time capsule from the Regan administration and full of anger, chugging riffs, and trashing of authority figures.

Keep your mind open.

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Top 30 Concerts of 2018: #’s 20 – 16

We’re into the top 20! So, without further ado…

#20: Gong Gong Gong at Chicago’s Hideout – A lot of people were curious about Gong Gong Gong and how two dudes from Beijing could create such a weird, interesting sound. It turned out to be one of the wildest post-punk sets I saw all year.

#19: Prettiest Eyes at Levitation France – This trio put on one of the wildest sets of the entire festival. Just when you thought they couldn’t get crazier, they did.

#18: Oktober Lieber at Levitation France – This electro duo was louder and heavier than I expected and a great surprise at the festival.

#17: Shopping at Chicago’s Beat Kitchen – The first show I saw in 2018 was one of the best. Three post-punk Brits playing jumpy, skittering rock and having a great time with everyone.

#16: Ron Gallo at Levitation AustinRon Gallo and his mates were the first band we saw at the 2018 Levitation Austin festival, and we couldn’t have asked for a better opener. Rocking, funny, and just not quite giving a damn what you thought, they put on a great set.

The top 15 are coming your way tomorrow!

Keep your mind open.

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Top 20 Singles of 2018: #’s 15 – 11

#15: “Christmas Time Is Here” by Khruangbin – Seriously, their cover of the Vince Guaraldi Trio classic is a pure delight and a lovely oasis during the crazy Christmas season.

#14: “I Came Back to Bitch” by L7 – The exact opposite of the above track, this tune is a kick in the junk from these punk legends who have been simmering with aggression and fire for a few years now. It was a welcome comeback for them and a great example of what to expect on their upcoming album this year.

#13: “Black Habit” by MIEN – Possibly the creepiest track on my top 20 list. This song was the first single release by this psychedelic supergroup, and it instantly got under your skin and crawled around in there.

#12: “Fresh” by D-Tension – Full disclosure, D-Tension and I knew each other in middle school. He grew up to be a major player in the Boston hip-hop scene and on Boston radio and this year he put out one of the best hip-hop singles of 2018. My jaw dropped when I heard this.

#11: “The Hype” by Shopping I knew this song by these British post-punks was going to be in my top singles list as soon as I heard it. The bass groove is wicked and the track feels and sounds like a good time.

Who makes the top 10? Come back tomorrow to find out, amigos.

Keep your mind open.

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Shopping announce fall tour dates for North America.

Shopping To Return Stateside For Fall North American Tour
In Support Of The Official Body, Out Now On FatCat Records

Playing Hopscotch, OctFest, Basilica Soundscape, And More

(photo credit: Matthew Williams)

 

“Wiry and urgent, ‘The Official Body’ offers vibrant, chaotic catharsis at an ideal moment.” — Rolling Stone

 

“‘The Official Body’ has such an expansive and warm soul that it forces you reconsider all the wiry clichés associated with post-punk.” — Pitchfork

“…Shopping have opted for one of the most revolutionary forces of all: fun.” — NPR Music 

 

“The 10 tracks here are audacious, funky, and have that element of outsider-cool leftover from the heyday of influences like Delta 5, Gang of Four and ESG.” — Paste

Having wrapped up a short North American tour of the west coast this past summer, which included a triumphant performance at San Francisco Pride to a crowd of nearly 50,000, Shopping – the London/Glasgow-based trio of Rachel Aggs (guitar, vocals), Billy Easter (bass, vocals) and Andrew Milk (drums, vocals) – are thrilled to announce they’ll return stateside next month in support of their most recent album, The Official Body, out now on FatCat Records. Including stops at Hopscotch Music Festival, OctFest, and Basilica Soundscape, the tour will kick off in Philadelphia on Thu. Sep. 6th at PhilMOCA. A full list of dates are below, with tickets on-sale now.
Shopping Tour Dates:
Sat. Aug. 11 – London, UK @ Oslo Hackney
Thu. Aug. 30 – Dorset, UK @ End Of The Road
Fri. Aug. 31 – Baignade Interdite @ Rivières, FR
Thu. Sep. 6 – Philadelphia, PA @ PhilMOCA
Fri. Sep. 7 – Raleigh, NC @ Hopscotch Music Festival *
Sat. Sep. 8 – Washington, DC @ Rock & Roll Hotel #
Sun. Sep. 9 – New York, NY @ OctFest %
Tue. Sep. 11 – Toronto, ON @ The Garrison
Wed. Sep. 12 – Montreal, QC @ Bar Le Ritz
Thu. Sep. 13 – Allston, MA @ Great Scott
Fri. Sep. 14 – Sun. Sep. 16 – Hudson, NY @ Basically Soundscape &

* = w/ Miguel, Belle & Sebastian, MC50 and more
# = w/ No Age
% = w/ The Flaming Lips, Nile Rodgers & CHIC, Girlpool and more
& = w/ Efrim Manuel Menuck, Grouper, Stephen O’Malley’s Un Vide Dans Le Ciel and more

 

Watch/Listen/Share:
Stream The Official Body via Spotify – https://spoti.fi/2KkcdKW
“The Hype” video – https://youtu.be/JnAm6AphanY
“Wild Child” video – https://youtu.be/GWvzFYTPrRw
“Suddenly Gone” video – https://youtu.be/GVcZGVVhfkU

 

Purchase The Official Body:
via Bandcamp – http://bit.ly/2kZQL6Z
via iTunes – http://apple.co/2iBSknm
via FatCat Shop – http://bit.ly/2C3DGO8

Download hi-res album art and press images of Shopping – 

www.pitchperfectpr.com/shopping/

Shopping online:
facebook.com/weareshopping

twitter.com/SH0PP1NG
soundcloud.com/shoppingband

fat-cat.co.uk/artist/shopping

pitchperfectpr.com/shopping

Keep your mind open.

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Live: Shopping, Tyvek, and Ganser – Chicago, IL – March 28, 2018

It’s a bit difficult for me to believe that it took me nearly three months to see some live music this year, but it’s true.  January and February were filled with crazy work schedules that weren’t conducive to making a trip even an hour’s drive away to see any bands or performers.

That all changed with getting to see Shopping, Tyvek,and Ganser at Chicago’s Beat Kitchen two nights ago.  I’d been keen on catching Shopping since hearing their newest album, The Official Body.  I knew nothing about Tyvek and Ganser going in, apart from a few video clips and digital tracks here and there.  Tyvek was loud and brash garage punk.  Ganser was darker and local post-punk.  This was also my first time at the Beat Kitchen.  It’s a nice, small venue, and the food there looked pretty good.

One thing I’ve discovered about Chicago shows is that, for the most part, the set start times are rigid.  Ganser kept up this tradition by starting at promptly 8:00pm.  They played an impressive set to a hometown crowd that included multiple tracks from their upcoming album Odd Talk.  Their stuff was sassy, jagged, and assertive.  Odd Talk should be a fine record based on what I heard at the Beat Kitchen.

Chicago post-punks Ganser.

Up next were Detroit’s / Philadelphia’s Tyvek.  They were as loud and hammering as I’d expected, and throwing saxophone riffs into the mix only made it better.  Lead singer / guitarist Kevin Boyer‘s axe looked like it had been bounced off a few floors and used as a cutting board, and the blaring chords he drew out of it only seemed to confirm my suspicions.

Detroit’s Tyvek.

Shopping had a large crowd by the time they took the stage.  I was glad to see so many people for the U.K. band that had spent most of the last couple months zig-zagging across the U.S.  They had the crowd jumping almost from the first note, and encouraged dancing throughout their entire set.  They sounded great.  Rachel Aggs‘ gets notes of her guitar that jump like water across a hot griddle.  Every song had a bouncing energy to it that was inescapable.  Highlights from the set included “The Hype,” “Wild Child,” and “My Dad’s a Dancer.”

The best way I can sum up their set is by what a woman yelled out from the crowd between songs: “You guys are so fun!”  Bassist Billy Easter said, “Thanks.  It’s fun being up here, too.”

Shopping having a blast.

Shopping set the bar high for live bands to follow this year.  Catch them if you can.  You need to get in on the fun they’re delivering.

Keep your mind open.

Thanks to Andrew Milk, Rachel Abbs, and Billy Easter for singing this gig flyer for me.

[Thanks to Sam McAllister from Pitch Perfect PR for hooking me up with a press pass for the show.]

Shopping U.S. tour is underway, and they’re celebrating by releasing a new single – “Suddenly Gone.”

SHOPPING SHARE VIDEO FOR “SUDDENLY GONE”
https://youtu.be/GVcZGVVhfkU

THE OFFICIAL BODY OUT NOW ON FATCAT RECORDS;
NORTH AMERICAN TOUR UNDERWAY!

“Wiry and urgent, ‘The Official Body’ offers vibrant, chaotic catharsis at an ideal moment.” — RollingStone
“…Shopping have opted for one of the most revolutionary forces of all: fun.” — NPR Music

“The third record from the UK trio wrangles their elastic, post-punk spirit into an urgency that feels bonded to the present. It makes for songs that are as mesmerizing as they are exhilarating.” — Pitchfork

“…their songs bristle at the rubbish aspects of modern life and sound like a proof of the time-worn maxim that dancing is an essential part of revolution.” — Bandcamp
Shopping are pleased to present the video for “Suddenly Gone,” before kicking off their NorthAmerican tour tomorrow night in Boston at Great Scott! The tour takes them all across the US and Canada, including stops at both Savannah Stopover and SXSW, in support of The Official Body, out last month on FatCat Records. A full list of dates is below.

The “Suddenly Gone” video, directed by LA-based director and animator Lessa Millet, “talks about labour and resources,” says band member Rachel Aggs. “It’s about feeling used and undervalued in a relationship or, more generally, as a queer and/or a person of colour making music or art in the UK and how that can feel very draining.” She adds, “you can feel overlooked for years and then suddenly tokenized when your identity becomes buzz-worthy or fashionable.

So much of the guitar music we love originates from roots and blues music made by and for people of colour and the same goes for dance and disco that has its roots so firmly in queer culture. We are asking people to reflect on what our cultural landscape would really look like if it weren’t for those pioneering but marginalized artists and in particular what our cities will eventually look like if queer spaces and independent gig venues continue to be forced to close.”

In creating the video, Millet says, “I went off of the energy of the song and the feeling behind it – this feeling of ‘I see what you’re doing, and I’m done being used.’ It’s optimistic and angry at the same time. In looking for images I just thought about all the instances a small group of people profit from everyone else, which way the money river flows, where does it pool. I think the magic tricks and hand shadows were a good metaphor for all the distractions that prevent us from seeing what is going on underneath.”

“It also suggests a parallel between this kind of emotional, creative draining and the terrifying environmental consequences of reckless money-grabbing corporations,” Aggs continues, “undervaluing and exploiting our natural resources and the impact of that on people living and working in more precarious parts of the world.”

Watch Shopping’s “Suddenly Gone” video — 
https://youtu.be/GVcZGVVhfkU

Watch Shopping’s “Wild Child” Video — 
https://youtu.be/GWvzFYTPrRw

Watch Shopping’s “The Hype” Video – 

https://youtu.be/JnAm6AphanY



Shopping Tour Dates:

Sun. March 4 — Philadelphia, PA @ Johnny Brenda’s *
Tue. March 6 — Washington, DC @ Union Stage *
Wed. March 7 — Asheville, NC @ Mothlight *
Thu. March 8 — Savannah, GA @ Savannah Stopover *
Fri. March 9 — Atlanta, GA @ 529 *
Sat. March 10 — New Orleans, LA @ Gasa Gasa *
Sun. March 11 — Houston, TX @ The Secret Group *
Mon. March 12 — San Antonio, TX @ Paper Tiger *
Wed. March 14 — Austin, TX @ Hotel Vegas Annex (SXSW) (11:25pm)
Thu. March 15 — Austin, TX @ Latitude 30 (SXSW) (10pm)
Fri. March 16 — El Paso, TX @ Lowbrow Palace *
Sat. March 17 — Phoenix, AZ @ Rebel Lounge *
Sun. March 18  — San Diego, CA @ Whistle Stop *
Tue. March 20 — Santa Ana, CA @ Constellation Room *
Wed. March 21 — Los Angeles, CA @ Resident * #
Thu. March 22 — San Francisco, CA @ Rickshaw Stop #
Fri. March 23 — Portland, OR @ Bunk Bar #
Sat. March 24 — Seattle, WA @ Vera Project #
Tue. March 27 — Minneapolis, MN @ 7th Street Entry
Wed. March 28 — Chicago, IL @ Beat Kitchen &
Thu. March 29 — Detroit, MI @ Marble Bar &
Fri. March 30 — Toronto, ON @ Baby G &
Sat. March 31 — Montreal, QC @ Bar Le Ritz &

* = w/ French Vanilla
# = w/ Lithics
& = w/ Tyvek

Purchase The Official Body:

via Bandcamp – http://bit.ly/2kZQL6Z
via iTunes – http://apple.co/2iBSknm

via FatCat Shop – http://bit.ly/2C3DGO8
 


Download hi-res album art and press images – 
www.pitchperfectpr.com/shopping/

(photo credit: CJ Monk)
Shopping online:

facebook.com/weareshopping

twitter.com/SH0PP1NG

soundcloud.com/shoppingband

fat-cat.co.uk/artist/shopping

pitchperfectpr.com/shopping

Keep your  mind open.

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