Tag: Adam Lasus

New Audio: Los Angeles’ Swerve Reimagines The Stone Roses’ “I Wanna Be Adored”

With the release of their Adam Lasus-produced full-length debut, 2021’s Ruin Your Day, the Los Angeles-based rock outfit Swerve, led by Greg Mahdesian and Ryan Berti was released to critically acclaim and received consistent airplay nationally — perhaps a result of the album featuring ripping, catchy, dark and politically-minded love songs.

Locally, the album produced three #1 hits on KROQ‘s Locals Only Chart — “Escape,” album title track “Ruin Your Day,” and “Ebbs and Flows” — and the station listed the band as one of the top ten bands in Los Angeles. Adding to a growing profile, they became an official Vox Amplifier artist, and they were praised by Alice Cooper and Matt Pinfield, who also played them on their respective radio shows.

Although momentum was building, they paused so Mahdesian could focus on spending time with his newborn daughter. Despite his newfound commitments, the band fit in an orchestral, cinematic rendition of “Ebbs and Flows,” and they played a sold-out get-out-the-vote show in 2022. When the band reconvened, their sound evolved into something leaner and more focused sound, which led to their Adam Lasus and Jessica Rotter-produced The Darkroom EP.

Slated for a June 21, 2024 release, the EP thematically sees the band looking back on their wilder years, and delves into the darkness of failing relationships, endless nights and the need to be adored, which quite fittingly led to their cover of the classic Stone Roses tune “I Wanna Be Adored.”

While retaining the yearning nature of the song and the beloved melody, the Los Angeles-based rock outfit’s cover turns the song into a buzzing and slithering Queens of the Stone Age/Desert Sessions-like ripper.

“The Stone Roses made one of my favorite records (I’ve actually purposefully never listened to Second Coming) and ‘I Wanna Be Adored’ is their most iconic track,” Swerve’s Greg Mahdesian says. “It’s also a genuinely weird song that has minimalist lyrics and psychedelic/rave/rock production, and I’ve never heard a cover of it before. We’ve done plenty of covers live, from the Replacements to Black Sabbath, but really wanted to record one and take it in a new direction. When you’re writing your own song you can get locked into a style or idea of what your music sounds like. When the song is already written for you, all the creative energy can be put into the arrangement, and we went left-field with this one. Ryan used a baritone guitar, we got inspired by Desert Sessions and Queens of the Stone Age, and I sang the vocals in the dark—why not, ya know? Brandon Duncan, who plays bass and mixes our records, was given free rein and turned in a really creative mix. This is already opening up our sound and approach for the next batch of songs we’re working on.”

Deriving their name from a nickname that was given to its frontwoman while she was in college, and now seen as the band’s motto representing their approach to life and music, the emerging Los Angeles-based indie rock act Mihi Nihil (pronounced Mee-Kee, Nee-Keel) — Mihi Vox (vocals), Benjamin Montoya (guitar), Nick Sternberg (bass) and Adam Alt (drums) — currently feature a former New York-based opera singer and three self-taught rock musicians. Interestingly, the band can trace their origins to a free-flowing batch of sessions that the longtime friends jokingly called “Whiskey Rehearsals,” which helped to quickly establish a sound that draws from an electric array of influences including early Radiohead, The Clash, Ennio Morricone, Sixousie and the Banshees, Bauhaus, Neil Young and Pixies.

Eventually, those “Whiskey Rehearsals” between the four friends led to the material which would eventually comprise their Adam Lasus-produced full-length nine-song, self-titled debut album. Recorded and written by the band in one room, the album’s material captures their simpatico and collaborative working relationship.

In the lead-up to the album’s release, the band released four singles over the past few months: two of the singles have appeared in two major motion pictures, with all four appearing in a handful of media outlets across 15 countries, as well as on 45 playlists. Their self-titled album’s fifth and latest single “Gold” is a slow-burning desert rock-like dirge centered around Mihi Vox’s expressive vocals, rumbling bass lines and gently swirling guitars that slowly builds up until a rumbling roar with soaring hooks. And while possessing a patient, almost painterly quality, “Gold” evokes sand-swept blacktop that reminds me The Fire TapesPhantoms, PJ Harvey and Chelsea Wolfe among others.


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Veteran indie producer Adam Lasus (Yo La Tengo, Helium, Madder Rose) captured the band’s live energy to tape, revealing an album imbued with a timeless, lush and layered sound that’s meant to be savored and slowly ingested. Like colorful rock formations, the music encompasses a myriad of subtle tints and bold textures. Recorded without a click track, MIHI NIHIL naturally expands and contracts, pushes and pulls, moving with ease. Whether it’s the cinematic echo of Ennio Morricone in “Verberation” or the ominous yearning for connection in the more soporific electro “Space Invader,” MIHI NIHIL shifts tonal presentations effortlessly with maximum emotional thrust.