WSND DJ set list – Throwback Thursday – January 04, 2024

Thanks to everyone who tuned in for Throwback Thursday. Here’s the set list:

  1. Ennio Morricone – Indagine Su Un Cittadino Al Di Sopra Di Ogni Sospel (1970)
  2. Band of Gypsys – Who Knows? (1970)
  3. Jim Sullivan – I Do What I Please (1971)
  4. Black Sabbath – Lord of This World (1971) (requested)
  5. Cleopatra Jones radio ad (1973)
  6. Solomon King – Song for Sabrina (1973)
  7. Motörhead – White Line Fever (1977)
  8. X-Ray Spex – Oh Bondage (Up Yours) (1977)
  9. Generation X – One Hundred Punks (1978)
  10. Jimi Hendrix – Night Bird Flying (1970) (requested)
  11. Count Yorga, Vampire radio ad (1970)
  12. The B-52’s – Planet Claire (1979)
  13. The Damned – Love Song (1979)
  14. Commercial for Philadelphia Cream Cheese (1979)
  15. M – Pop Muzik (1979) (requested)
  16. Gary Numan – Cars (1979) (requested)
  17. The Undertones – Here Comes the Summer (1979) (requested)
  18. Bow Wow Wow – Radio G String (1980)
  19. Joy Division – In a Lonely Place (live) (1981)
  20. Commercial for Ultrabrite toothpaste (1982)
  21. Haircut 100 – Love Plus One (1982) (requested)
  22. Falco – Der Kommissar (1982) (requested)
  23. Gary Moore (feat. Phil Lynott) – Out in the Fields (1985) (requested)
  24. The Art of Noise (feat. Max Headroom) – Paranoia (1986)
  25. Fuzzbox – Love Is the Slug (1986)
  26. New Order – Bizarre Love Triangle (1986) (requested)
  27. New Order – Fine Time (1988)
  28. Sammy Hagar – Winner Takes It All (1987) (requested)
  29. Jane’s Addiction – Trip Away (live) (1987)
  30. Public Enemy – Public Enemy No. 1 (1987)
  31. My Bloody Valentine – Feed Me with Your Kiss (1988)
  32. Beastie Boys – Shake Your Rump (1989)
  33. The Black Crowes – Sting Me (1992) (requested)
  34. K.D. Lang – Just Keep Me Moving (1993)
  35. Marky Mark and The Funky Bunch – Good Vibrations (1991) (requested)
  36. TV spot for Groundhog Day
  37. Kris Kross – Jump (1992) (requested)
  38. TV commercial for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Pizza Hut
  39. Bad Religion – Incomplete (1994)
  40. Counting Crows – Mr. Jones (1993) (requested)
  41. Faith No More – Ricochet (1994)
  42. Jem and The Holograms theme song
  43. The Stone Roses – Love Spreads (1994) (requested)
  44. The Black Keys – I’m Glad (1995)
  45. Scatman John – Scatman (1995) (requested)
  46. Cirrus – Break In (1996)
  47. Danny Saber – Lift Off (1996)
  48. Nirvana – Heart-Shaped Box (1993) (requested)

The next Throwback Thursday will be either January 11th or 18th. Stay tuned!

Keep your mind open.

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Top 25 albums of 2023: #’s 25 – 21

Now that 2023 has passed us, it’s time for my annual countdown of some of my favorite stuff of the previous year. Who made the top 25? Read on and discover!

#25: Cavaran – Nights at Josan

Named after a bar near their recording studio they’d frequent after recording sessions, Belgium’s Cavaran returned with a solid record of desert / stoner rock that was a badly need dose of rocket fuel into our collective veins.

#24: Gimenö – Movement Remixes

Just like 2022, there was a lot of good EDM released last year, and this album of remixes by pals of DJ / producer Gimenö was among it. There isn’t a bad track on here. It’s all floor-fillers.

#23: Big Miz – Where I Belong

Another excellent EDM EP, this one from Big Miz on the Homage label. Miz combined house with trance and does it with subtle, slick skill.

#22: Bodywash – I Held the Shape While I Could

Shoegaze made a fine return this year, and that makes me happy – as did this cool record by Bodywash that bathes you in guitars, reverb, and clove cigarette smoke vocals.

#21: Eaves Wilder – Hookey

Another fun EP, this one about break-ups, screw-ups (in the world of mental health care), and drink-ups. Eaves Wilder might be “the next big thing.” Get in on her stuff now and become one of the cool kids.

Who makes the top 20? Come back tomorrow to find out!

Keep your mind open.

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WSND DJ set list – Best of 2023 – January 01, 2024

Thanks to all who listed to my “Best of 2023” show on WSND. Here are tracks from some of my favorite albums of last year:

  1. The Hives – Bogus Operandi
  2. Art Feynman – All I Can Do
  3. LSS – TNK
  4. Half Cut – Free
  5. Black Helium – Summer of Hair
  6. Trevor Rabin – Push (requested)
  7. Cavaran – It Gives
  8. Big Miz – Where I Belong (LUXE remix)
  9. Bodywash – Sterilizer
  10. Eaves Wilder – Are You Diagnosed?
  11. Worg – Oracolo (Neel remix)
  12. Noëtik – Ariko
  13. The Rolling Stones – Angry (requested)
  14. The Serfs – Beat Me Down
  15. Motörhead – Killers (live)
  16. Rich Aucoin – Shift
  17. Robin Trower (feat. Sari Schorr) – The Circle Is Complete (requested)
  18. Shame – Burning By Design
  19. Melody Fields – Rave On
  20. Thee Oh Sees – Tidal Wave (live)
  21. Sound Cipher – Permissive Action Link
  22. Mandy, Indiana – Pinking Shears
  23. King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard – Gila Monster
  24. Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs – Mr. Medicine
  25. Matthew Halsall – Mountains, Trees and Seas

I’m back on air January 08th with more editions of “Throwback Thursday” and “3-for-Thursday.”

Keep your mind open.

[Don’t forget to subscribe before you go.]

WSND DJ set list – Mystery Monday – January 01, 2024

Thanks to all who listened to the first “Mystery Monday” show of 2024 on WSND. It was three hours of electronic dance music to kick off the new year. Here’s the set list:

  1. Bob Sinclar – Champs Elysees Theme
  2. Fatboy Slim – Acid 8000
  3. Fatboy Slim – Kalifornia
  4. Justice – Genesis (requested)
  5. Junior Jack – Stupidisco
  6. Darude – Feel the Beat (requested)
  7. Jacques Greene – On Your Side
  8. Alex Stealthy – Once (Sunseeker remix)
  9. L.A. Style – James Brown Is Dead (requested)
  10. David Starfire – Juuteeya
  11. Cheb I Sabbah – Alkher Illa Doofer (The Nectar remix)
  12. Skrillex – First of the Year (requested)
  13. Bob Sinclar – I Feel for You
  14. D: Fuse & Hiratka – Don’t Stop
  15. DJ Swamp – Disintegrator
  16. Gimenö – Ports (Edgar De Ramon remix)
  17. Gimenö – (Hd Substance remix)
  18. George T – Dub Letter
  19. The Crystal Method – Dubalicious Demo Groove
  20. The Crystal Method – Vapor Trail
  21. Disco Lines – Techno & Tequila
  22. Dastrix – Dude in the Moon (Luna mix)
  23. Damien N-Drix – Pump It Up
  24. Namdam feat. Lloyd Da Kleena – Fruits
  25. Cevin Fisher – Music Saved My Life
  26. Fluke – Another Kind of Blues
  27. X Press 2 – Musik Express
  28. BadboE – My Bad
  29. Hannah Wants & Chris Lorenzo – Rhymes
  30. Cassius – 1999
  31. Jedi Knights – Catch the Break
  32. Apollo 440 – Smoke & Mirrors
  33. The Golden Boy – Blah Blah Shake
  34. Faithless – Postcards

The next Mystery Monday will be January 08th at 7pm Eastern!

Keep your mind open.

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Church Chords releases “She Lays on a Leaf” from their upcoming album due Feb. 23, 2024.

Stephen Buono (by Matt Gribben) / Finom (by Alex Viscius) / Nels Cline / Ricardo Dias Gomes
Last month, Church Chords announced their debut album, elvis, he was Schlager, set to release on February 23rd via Otherly Love Records. The collaborative recording project led by musician/producer Stephen Buono brings together accomplished musicians from his time spent in Philadelphia, New York City, Chicago, and Los Angeles, to create music that honors experimentation and collaboration.  

Today, Church Chords returned to share “She Lays on a Leaf,” their avant-pop krautrock featuring guitar from Nels Cline (Wilco) and vocals by Finom‘s Macie Stewart and Sima Cunningham alongside Ricardo Dias Gomes (Caetano Veloso), who also penned the song’s lyrics. 

When asked about the track, Buono shared more about collaborating with Cline: “For this song, I asked Nels to imagine John McLaughlin playing the opening guitar solo on ”Mother Sky” by Can. I think the solo on the alternate version is one of his best on record. It is such an integral part of the song that I gave him writing credit. On the album version, I love how co-producer John Herndon synthesized the solo to sound like I don’t know what.”
STREAM: “SHE LAYS ON A LEAF”

The story of elvis, he was Schlager, begins ca. 2016 in Chicago where Buono had relocated after four decades as a Philadelphia area resident, who frequently traveled to New York in his 20s & 30s soaking up the scenes at Tonic and The Village Vanguard. In Philly, in addition to his ubiquitous presence at a multitude of performances, Buono notably volunteered for the renowned avant garde presenter Ars Nova Workshop and put on his own live events at a series of West Philadelphia spaces. He also founded, wrote music for, and played guitar in the post-punk outfit, Split/Red, which BrooklynVegan called “Beefheart-ian….punk with an unbridled, avant-garde antagonism.”

Deeply embedded and inspired by the fertile music scene in the Windy City, where he moved at 38, he wanted his first Church Chords album to be fully Chicago-centric, using only locals. Buono oversaw a session at Steve Albini’s famed Electrical Audio that attempted to, as he puts it, “synthesize ‘electric-era’ Miles Davis with Black Sabbath.” A laudable experiment that he felt was ultimately a failure, opting to stick it in his back pocket for re-evaluation later on.

In Fall 2016 Buono relocated to Los Angeles and, a year to the day after his Electrical Audio session, dusted off the shelved material in a session with bassist Devin Hoff (Julia Holter, Sharon Van Etten), percussionist John Herndon, and multi-instrumentalist Ben Boye (Ty Segall, Bonnie “Prince” Billy). The trio laid down new rhythm tracks for six songs from the original session — a 35-minute continuous improvisation that changed the dynamic and structure of the work. In addition, Buono produced an additional 4 songs from tracks laid down by Chicagoan multihyphenate Jim Baker on ARP2000. Elliot Bergman (Wild Belle) produced one of these songs, “Recent Mineral” aka “Renda,” which has versions in both English and Portuguese.

For the next little while, Buono started massaging this mass of material into shape alongside co-producers in the vein of a hip-hop producer. As he did, more voices and players from an equally vibrant L.A. scene were folded into the proceedings. Among them, keyboardist Sam Barsh (Kanye West, Kendrick Lamar); guitarists Nels Cline, Jeff Parker (Tortoise), Mark Shippy (US Maple), Brandon Seabrook; horn player Josh Johnson (Leon Bridges’ musical director); percussionist Kenny Wollesen (Bill Frisell, Tom Waits); and Nate Walcott (a multi-instrumentalist known for his work with Bright Eyes, Red Hot Chili Peppers, and Phoebe Bridgers).

It was at this point that Buono made some crucial decisions related to the album and the Church Chords project as a whole. The biggest was that he opted to lessen his contributions as a performer; to instead take on the role of a producer in the mode of Teo Macero or a member of Public Enemy’s Bomb Squad. He would be directing the sessions and helping finesse the finished product but otherwise staying out of the musicians’ way as they wrote lyrics and improvised.

As well, Buono decided early on that the material he was conceptualizing for elvis, he was Schlager needed vocals, and lyrics. Through his many connections in the community, he became friends with Ricardo Dias Gomes, a Brazilian artist who has worked with the likes of Caetano Veloso and Arto Lindsay. Initially, Gomes was going to contribute lyrics to a single song, but as he heard more of the music, he was inspired to write words for the majority of the tracks. Also making vital contributions were multi-instrumentalist/producer Matt Mehlan, who wrote “Warriors of Playtime,” a powerful song written in the wake of George Floyd’s murder; and old friend Kristin Slipp (Dirty Projectors, Mmeadows) who contributed words and vocals to “Alone, Under The Water” and several others.

Gomes, Slipp, and Mehlan’s lyrics were treated with immense care and compassion by the people Buono tapped to sing on elvis, he was Schlager. As with the rest of the album, the vocalists are an array of jaw-dropping talent from Genevieve Artadi, here singing in Portuguese for the first time on record, Brazilian Thalma de Freitas (Kamasi Washington, Madlib), electropop genius Takako Minekawa to L.A. dynamo zzzahara (the Simps) to the avant pop group Finom (f.k.a. Ohmme) to Ako Castuera, an artist who worked behind on Adventure Time. 

The number of contributors and the storyline behind elvis, he was Schlager, is a little dizzying to comprehend. And it may sound like a recipe for a mess — a situation with too many cooks. But thanks to Buono’s steady hands guiding each step of the process, the album is a complete, cohesive statement. An exploratory, daring, and engaging expression of music’s transformative power. A mood piece that flows steadily and smoothly from vibe to vibe, guiding the listener through each melodic twist and rhythmic turn.

Keep your mind open.

[Lay your e-mail address on the subscription box while you’re here.]

[Thanks to Cody at Terrorbird Media.]

WSND DJ set list – 3-for-Thursday Nocturne – December 28, 2023

Thanks to all who listened to 3-for-Thursday Nocturne on WSND with special guest DJ (and my daughter) Crystal. Here’s our set list:

  1. Robin Trower, Jack Bruce, and Gary Husband – Politician (live) (requested) (a trio covering a trio)
  2. Nirvana – About a Girl (live) (originally a trio and 3-word song title)
  3. Miss Red – Pull It Up (3rd song from the Murder album)
  4. Deeper – This Heat (3rd song from the Auto-Pain album)
  5. Three Dog Night – One (requested) (“Three” in the band’s name)
  6. King Buffalo – Locusts (trio and 3rd song from the The Burden of Restlessness album)
  7. Mondo Rock – Rule of Threes (“Three” in the song title)
  8. The Ramones – Pet Seminary (live) (three-peat)
  9. The Ramones – Sniffing Glue (live)
  10. The Ramones – Zero Zero UFO
  11. Stray Cats – Three Time’s a Charm (live) (requested) (trio and “three” in the song title)
  12. God Lives Underwater – Fool (three-word band name and 3rd song from the Empty album)
  13. MOTSUS – Freddy (3rd song from the Oumuamua album)
  14. Leslie West and Joe Bonamassa – Third Degree (requested) (“third” in the title)
  15. JEFF The Brotherhood – Health and Strength (three-word band name and song title)
  16. Maurice Barre – Lawrence of Arabia Overture (three-word film score title)
  17. Primus – My Name Is Mud (trio, song from 3rd album – Pork Soda – released in 1993)
  18. American Royalty – Mariah (3rd song from the Prismatic album)
  19. Radiohead – Decks Dark (3rd song from the A Moon Shaped Pool album)
  20. The Kills – Heart of a Dog (3rd song from the three-word titled Ash & Ice album)
  21. Interpol – Lief Erikson (currently a trio, 3rd song from the Turn on the Bright Lights album)
  22. AJR – Three-Thirty (3-letter band name, trio, three minutes-thirty seconds long, “330” in song title)
  23. Gary Wilson – The Sin Eater (three-word title)
  24. Jacques Greene – The Look (3rd song from the ANTH01 album)
  25. Gorillaz – Plastic Beach (from their 3rd album, Plastic Beach, released March 03, 2010)
  26. Death Valley Girls – Death Valley Boogie (3-word song tile and band name)
  27. Drenge – I Wanna Break You in Half (3rd song from their self-titled album)

I’m back on air January 01, 2024 at 7pm Eastern with “Mystery Monday” for three hours and then a two-hour “Best of 2023” set!

Keep your mind open.

[Don’t forget to subscribe!]

WSND DJ set list – Throwback Thursday – December 28, 2023

Thanks to all who listened to the latest Throwback Thursday show on WSND with special guest DJ (and my daughter), Crystal. Here’s our set list:

  1. James Brown – Get Up (I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine (1970)
  2. Creedence Clearwater Revival – Travelin’ Band (1970)
  3. And Soon the Darkness radio ad (1970)
  4. Shaft radio ad (1971)
  5. Johnny Cash – Man in Black (1971)
  6. MC5 – Thunder Express (live) (1972)
  7. Stevie Wonder – Superstition (1972)
  8. Enter the Dragon Main Titles (1973)
  9. Thin Lizzy – Vagabond of the Western World (1973) (requested)
  10. Brothers and One – Hard On Me (1974)
  11. New York Dolls – Lone Star Queen (1974)
  12. Foxy Brown radio ad (1974)
  13. Starbuck – Moonlight Feels Right (1975)
  14. Heatwave – Boogie Nights (1976)
  15. Bee Gees – Jive Talkin’ (1977)
  16. Blondie – Heart of Glass (1978)
  17. Cheryl Ladd – Think It Over (1978)
  18. The Clash – The Magnificent Seven (1980)
  19. Echo and The Bunnymen – Do It Clean (1980)
  20. The Cars – Shake It Up (1981)
  21. Sun Country Wine Coolers commercial
  22. Michael Jackson – Rock with You (1980)
  23. Agent Orange – Pipeline (1981)
  24. Donald Fagen – I.G.Y. (1982)
  25. Mötley Crüe – Shout at the Devil (1983)
  26. Frosted Mini-Wheats commercial
  27. Julian Cope – Bill Drummond Said (1984)
  28. Motörhead – Killed By Death (1984)
  29. Hüsker Dü – New Day Rising (1985)
  30. WWE Superstars – Real American (1985)
  31. INXS – What You Need (1986)
  32. Dido – Thank You (1999)
  33. The Dickies – Attack of the Killer Clowns from Outer Space (live) (1990)
  34. Pixies – Velouria (1990)
  35. Blade Runner TV spot
  36. Dire Straits – Planet of New Orleans (1991) (requested)
  37. L7 – Suzy Is a Headbanger (1991)
  38. Lenny Kravitz – Always on the Run (1991)
  39. Danzig – Left Hand Black (1992)
  40. Lou Reed – What’s Good (1993)
  41. American Music Club – All Your Jeans Were Too Tight (1993)
  42. Bad Brains – Rise (1993)
  43. The Corrs – Dreams (1997)
  44. Bomb the Bass – One to One Religion (Skankapell mix) (1996)
  45. Bacon Popper – Free (1999)

Throwback Thursday returns January 04, 2024!

Keep your mind open.

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Mac Sabbath announces early 2024 western U.S. tour with The Darts.

Drive-thru metal rockers Mac Sabbath are about to launch a short western U.S. tour with psych-rockers The Darts, starting at the legendary Pappy and Harriets in Pioneertown, California and ending at the wild Area 15 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Don’t miss them. Tickets are on sale now.

01/17/24 – Pioneertown, CA – MAC SABBATH – Pappy And Harriets

01/19/24 – Flagstaff, AZ – MAC SABBATH – Orpheum Theater 

01/20/24 – Tucson, AZ – MAC SABBATH – Rialto Theatre 

01/21/24 – Las Vegas, NV – MAC SABBATH – The Portal Inside AREA 15

Keep your mind open.

[Don’t forget to subscribe before you go.]

[Thanks to Maria at Adrenaline PR.]

TOOL announces 2024 European dates.

TOOL make their highly-anticipated return to Europe this Spring, with a month of dates slated for the 2024 trek, including outings at London’s The OArena, Stockholm’s Tele2 Arena and Paris’ Accor Arena, as well as festival outings at Graspop Metal Meeting, Tons of Rock and CopenHell.

News of the band’s European tour follows a particularly busy time for the Los Angeles-based band, with the foursome featuring Danny Carey, Justin Chancellor, Adam Jones and Maynard James Keenan, currently in the midst of a North American tour that extends into February. Over the last five months, TOOL has headlined Aftershock, Welcome to Rockville, Louder Than Life and the Sonic Temple Arts & Music festivals, as well as a once-in-a-lifetime performance at Power Trip, which Metal Hammer described as “a mind-melting, triumphant showcase of just how singular their art is, a transcendental experience that surpasses genre boundaries.”

Tickets for all headlining dates are on-sale now.

TOOL European tour dates:

25 May Hannover, DE ZAG Arena

27 May  Amsterdam, NL Ziggo Dome

30 May Birmingham, UK Resorts World Arena

1 June Manchester, UK AO Arena

3 June London, UK The O2 Arena

5 June Paris, FR Accor Arena

8 June Berlin, DE Parkbühne Wuhlheide

10 June Wien, AT Wiener Stadthalle

11 June Kraków, PL Tauron Arena

13 June Budapest, HU BudapestAréna

18 June Köln, DE Lanxess Arena

20 June Dessel, BE Graspop Metal Meeting

22 June Copenhagen, DK CopenHell

25 June Stockholm, SE Tele2 Arena

27 June Oslo, NO Tons of Rock

TOOL North American tour dates:

10 January Baltimore, MD CFG Bank Arena

12 January New York, NY Madison Square Garden

13 January New York, NY Madison Square Garden

18 January Hollywood, FL Hard Rock Live at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Hollywood

19 January Hollywood, FL Hard Rock Live at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Hollywood

21 January Charlotte, NC Spectrum Center

23 January Nashville, TN Bridgestone Arena

24 January Atlanta, GA State Farm Arena

26 January Birmingham, AL The Legacy Arena at The BJCC

27 January Biloxi, MS Mississippi Coast Coliseum

30 January Corpus Christi, TX American Bank Center

31 January Austin, TX Moody Center

2 February Dallas, TX American Airlines Center

3 February Oklahoma City, OK Paycom Center

5 February Denver, CO Ball Arena

7 February El Paso, TX UTEP Don Haskins Center

9 February Phoenix, AZ Footprint Center

10 February Phoenix, AZ Footprint Center

12 February Fresno, CA Save Mart Center

14 February Los Angeles, CA Crypto.com Arena

15 February Los Angeles, CA Crypto.com Arena

17 February Ontario, CA Toyota Arena

18 February Las Vegas, NV T-Mobile Arena

Keep your mind open.

[Don’t forget to subscribe before you go.]

[Thanks to Monica at Speakeasy PR]

Ty Segall announces new album due January 26 – “Three Bells.”

Photo Credit – Denée Segall

Ty Segall returns with his most ambitious, elastic set of songs to date, Three Bells, to be released January 26th via Drag City. Following 2022’s acoustic introspection opus, “Hello, Hi,”Three Bells is a deeper, wilder journey to the center of the self, with Ty using his musical vocabulary with ever-increasing sophistication. In conjunction with today’s announcement, Tyunveils the new single/video, “My Room.”

Three Bells is an obsessive quest for expression. With much of the album being played by Ty in conversation with himself, a decision that further elevates the album’s conception, it answers back to the riptide always pulling Ty subconsciously into the depths. Questions we all ask in our own private mirrors are faced down here — and regardless of what the mysterious “Three Bells” mean in the context of the album’s libretto, you can be assured that Ty’s ringing them for himself, and for the rest of us in turn. With all fifteen songs brimming with perspectives, shape-shifting incessantly, Ty pushed them out farther and farther compositionally, challenging the way they’d be played. Each song moves through repetitive, thematic material in its own way, building a claustrophobic/paranoia vibe, cycling bold thrusts forward into ego deaths, the one-step-forward, two-steps-back patterns framing an overriding ask: what can we do to get past the back-and-forth conversation, to arrive at a place of acceptance?

On Three Bells, Ty and Denée Segall collaborated on five of the songs, including the previously released single, “Eggman.” Some of the songs needed the kind of playing Ty couldn’t get alone. Emmett Kelly’s bass parts not only addressed that need, but inspired the way the songs eventually went down. The remaining members of the Freedom Band were called in to play, transforming the material. Co-producer Cooper Crain, who deeply contributed to both Harmonizer and “Hello, Hi”, engineered and mixed most of the album.

With todays’ single, “My Room,” Ty rings the bell of the introvert who is empowered by the world inside his own room. The layers of acoustic and electric guitars dance around each other, quickening the already swinging tempo, while fuzz distortion blows the walls farther back as he takes us deeper. The accompanying music video was directed by longtime collaborators MattYoka and Ty, and features Ty steadfastly performing the song on stage as bananas are launched in his direction. He remains resolute in dedication to the craft, only to reveal a surreal dialogue between the dual facets of his own identity.

Three Bells takes Ty Segall’s trips so much deeper and farther than they’ve gone before — a masterpiece of personal expression, expressed through words, music and production, parabolically addressing malaise with compassion in a flowing, unstoppable hour-plus of intoxicating sound. Following the album’s release, Ty will tour throughout North America. Tickets are on sale now.
 

Pre-order Ty Segall’s Three Bells

Listen/Watch Ty Segall’s “My Room”

Listen/Watch Ty Segall’s “Void”

Listen/Watch Ty Segall’s “Eggman”

Three Bells Tracklisting:
1. The Bell
2. Void
3. I Hear
4. Hi Dee Dee
5. My Best Friend
6. Reflections
7. Move
8. Eggman
9. My Room
10. Watcher
11. Repetition
12. To You
13. Wait
14. Denée
15. What Can We Do

Ty Segall 2024 Tour Dates:
(new dates in bold)


Tue. Feb. 20 – San Francisco, CA @ Great American Music Hall
Wed. Feb. 21 – San Francisco, CA @ Great American Music Hall
Fri. Feb. 23 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Wiltern *
Sat. Feb. 24 – Solana Beach, CA @ Belly Up
Fri. Apr. 19 – Tucson, AZ @ 191 Toole
Sat. Apr. 20 – Albuquerque, NM @ Sister Bar
Mon. Apr. 22 – Austin, TX @ Mohawk (Outside) 
Tue. Apr. 23 – Jackson, MS @ Duling Hall
Wed. Apr. 24 – Nashville, TN @ Brooklyn Bowl
Fri. Apr. 26 – Asheville, NC @ The Orange Peel
Sat. Apr. 27 –  Washington DC @ Lincoln Theatre 
Sun. Apr. 28 – Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer
Mon. Apr. 29 – New York, NY @ Webster Hall
Wed. May 1 – Boston, MA @ Royale
Thu. May 2 – Montreal, QC @ Club Soda
Fri. May 3 – Toronto, ON @ Danforth Music Hall
Sun. May 5 – Cleveland, OH @ Beachland Ballroom
Mon. May 6 – Chicago, IL @ Thalia Hall
Tue. May 7 – Omaha, NE @ The Waiting Room
Thu. May 9 – Englewood, CO @ Gothic Theatre
Sat. May 11 – Sacramento, CA @ Harlow’s
Fri. June 28 – London, UK @ Roundhouse

# w/ Mike Donovan
* w/ White Fence

Keep your mind open.

[Don’t forget to subscribe before you go.]

[Thanks to Jessica at Pitch Perfect PR.]