Tag: Fire Talk Records

New Video: Wombo Shares Nervous “S.T. Tilted”

Since their formation back in 2016, Louisville-based trio Wombo — Sydney Chadwick (vocals, bass), Cameron Lowe (guitar) and Joel Taylor (drums) — have carved out a unique lane for themselves, contorting post-punk structures into uncanny shapes. And with their Danger in Fives, which is slated for an August 8, 2025 release through Fire Talk, reportedly sees the band not only enhancing their formula, but routinely perfecting them.

To ace their techniques, the Louisville-based trio had to tear them apart first. Long-held , standardized practices of writing and workshopping material in Joel Taylor’s post-war basement rehearsal space were paused while the band explored different writing process. And that experimentation results in the band showcasing some subtle shifts and additions to their sonic palette, including digital texture and the incorporation of drum machine on a couple of tracks. The band’s desire to change their model was in part to “get away from a results mindset, where it’s about producing things for a certain expectation instead of doing it all for the joy of exploring,” the band’s Cameron Lowe says. Adds the band’s Chadwick, “I don’t want to be in a band that’s confined to one form of writing. Where’s the fun and the creativity and the exploration in that? You have to push yourself and try something new.”

Danger in Fives final advance single, “S.T. Titled,” sees the band at their distilled, purest essence. Anchored around Lowe’s angular, off-kilter bursts of scratchy guitar, Taylor’s skeletal yet propulsive drumming and Chadwick’s supple bass lines, the song’s arrangement serves as a nervous and uneasy bed for Chadwick’s dreamily mesmerizing delivery. By contrasting the deeply nervous and uneasy with the seemingly calm, the song somehow manages to evoke our current nightmarish moment in which we’re all slowly losing our minds — and trying not to show it. But, as always cracks will show . . .

“It’s the first song we wrote after the Slab EP that made it on Danger in Fives,” the band’s Lowe says of the single. “We weren’t sure it was going to work, but all the contrasting parts ended up being cool. It’s rare for a Wombo song to be written on guitar first like this one, with some of the bass and drum parts jammed out in the basement afterwards. The wacky guitar part came last.”

Directed by the band’s Cameron Lowe, the accompanying video for “S.T. Titled,” continues a run of entirely self-produced videos. The video sees the band in a hand-made waiting room set, constructed by Lowe and Chadwick in Chadwick’s garage. The band is seen anxiously waiting in the waiting room — with the expected anxiousness and unease that waiting rooms entail.

The Louisville-based trio will be marking on a tour to support the new album. The tour includes a September 12, 2025 stop at Baby’s All Right and a September 14, 2025 stop at one of my favorite rooms in Montréal, L’Escogriffe. Check out the rest of the tour dates below.

New Video: Los Angeles’ Jawdropped Shares Fuzzy Power Pop Anthem “Star”

Los Angeles-based outfit Jawdropped — Roman Zangari (vocals, guitar), Kyra Morling (vocals, tambourine), Sam Edwards (bass) and Joe Fastigi (drums) — features grizzled scene vets, who each come to their newest project together from a trail of previous projects, including Alms, The Shaking Hands, jerseygirl, Destiny Inn and others. Connecting through their involvement run the local DIY scene and their mutual respect and admiration for each other’s work, the band has quickly built up buzz for pairing tongue-in-cheek lyrics with catchy hooks and melodies in a way that recalls early 90s alt rock.

Adding to the growing buzz surrounding the band, they’ve opened for Chanel Beads, Fish Narc, PHF and others. And they recently signed to Fire Talk Records‘ imprint Angel Tapes, who also released their debut single “Star.” “Star” is a Dinosaur, Jr.-like bit of power pop featuring fuzzy, distortion pedaled power chords, thunderous drumming, big catchy hooks and saccharine sweet boy-girl harmonies. And while nostalgia-inducing for the old heads out there, the song is rooted in a subtly modern sensibility, much like bands like Glimmer and others.

“Star” presents the age-old tale of small-town girl moving to the big city to follow her dreams. But she swept up in the city’s seedy underbelly, partying and strung out on coke — like a star!

Directed by Jack Dione of untitled (halo), the accompanying video is a shot on supersaturated and grainy VHS-styled visual that captures the band’s goofy, freewheeling energy while following them through the streets of their hometown.

New Video: Wombo Shares Meditative “Thread”

Louisville-based trio Wombo — Sydney Chadwick, Cameron Lowe and Joel Taylor — exploded into the national scene with last year’s critically applauded Fairy Rust. Building upon a growing profile, the Louisville-based trio’s follow-up effort, Slab EP is slated for a Friday release through Fire Talk Records.

Recorded by Nick Roeder, Slab EP is reportedly a loose, instinctual grouping of songs that gradually morph into the sort of sonic territory that would be familiar to fans of their experimental and surrealistic escapism, as well as sweeter, stripped down material. Most of the EP’s guitar parts are scratch takes that fit both the dueling energies and intentional imperfections of the songs with overlaid vocals recorded on the same day. The end result is an of-the-moment snapshot of a band that’s settling naturally into their own sound — while being in constant evolution.

Last month, I wrote about EP title track “Slab,” a track built around wiry and scratchy bursts of guitar, relentless four-on-the-floor paired with Chadwick’s dreamily detached delivery singing lyrics that feel and sound like stream-of-consciousness non-sequiturs. “Slab” manages to be forceful yet dreamy and reveals an uncanny sense for catchy melody. The band explains that the lyrics were inspired by a book Chadwick had read about dissociation, and came from improvising lyrics in the band’s basement practice space.

Slab EP‘s latest single “Thread” is a slow-burning and meditative song built around Chadwick’s expressive delivery paired with jangling guitars and sparse yet dramatic drumming. The end result is a song that nods at a familiar melancholy and loneliness that’s grounded in psychological realism.

While sounding as though it could have been released during 120 Minutes‘ heyday, “’Thread’ was originally just a little thing I use to play on piano,” the band’s Chadwick explains. “I showed Joel and Cameron one day when we were messing around at practice and they persuaded me to try and put some words to it and helped me turn it into a song we could play together as a band.”

Directed, filmed and edited by the members of Wombo, the accompanying video for “Thread” is a nostalgia-inducing fever dream that fits the 120 Minutes-like aesthetic of the song.

New Video: Wombo Shares Dreamy “Slab”

Louisville-based trio Wombo — Sydney Chadwick, Cameron Lowe and Joel Taylor — exploded into the national scene with last year’s critically applauded Fairy Rust. Building upon a growing profile, the Louisville-based trio’s follow-up effort, Slab EP is slated for a June 16, 2023 release through Fire Talk Records.

Recorded by Nick Roeder, the forthcoming EP is reportedly a loose, instinctual grouping of songs that gradually morph into sonic territory that’s familiar to those familiar with the band’s experimental and surrealistic escapism, as well as sweeter. stripped-down sets. Most of the EP’s guitar parts are scratch takes that fit both the dealing energies and international imperfections of the songs with overlaid vocals recorded on the same day. The result is an of-the-moment snapshot of a band that’s settling naturally into their own sound while in constant evolution.

The EP’s latest single, EP title track “Slab” is built around wiry and scratchy bursts of guitar, relentless four-on-the-floor paired with Chadwick’s dreamy and detached delivery singing lyrics that feel and sound like stream-of-consciousness non-sequiturs. “Slab” manages to be forceful yet dreamy and reveals an uncanny sense for catchy melody. The band explains that the lyrics were inspired by a book Chadwick had red abated dissociation, and came from improvising lyrics in the band’s basement practice space.

Directed by the band, fittingly, the video is a surrealistic fever dream that follows Chadwick as she walks from the basement studio through a pharmacy, a replica of her house, front porch and imaginary bedroom — and features a journal entry about a dream she had superimposed over it all.

Perhaps best known as one-half of acclaimed Brooklyn-based noise rock duo Talk Normal, an act that released two critically applauded albums, Sugarland and Sunshine and opened for the likes of Sonic Youth, Wire, Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Zola Jesus among others, Andyra Ambro (vocals, drums) saw the breakup of the band, as marking a major shift in her own creative process and an opportunity to start something completely new with her solo recording project Gold Dime, which has been performing live as a trio — with  Jessica Ackerley and Ian Douglas-Moore — since 2014. Interestingly Ambro’s Gold Dime has received some attention nationally as the live trio have opened for Lower Dens, U.S. Girls and Xiu Xiu. And after several years of touring, writing and recording material, Ambro’s long-awaited Gold Dime debut Nerves is slated for a June 2, 2017 release through Fire Talk Records.

Self-produced by Ambro, recorded by PC Worship’s Justin Frey, mixed by Jonny Schenke and mixed by Ambro’s former Talk Normal partner Sarah Register, the album is a result in marked shift in Ambro’s creative process with the material reportedly consisting of much more exploratory and experimental compositions, and as you’ll hear on “Shut Up,” Nerves’ second single, Ambro’s sound manages to effortlessly alternate between swirling, hypnotic drone and wild and abrasive dissonance while held together by a propulsive motorik groove. Ambro’s ironically (and somewhat detached) deadpan vocals float over the mix. And while clearly possessing an almost neurotic and anxious tension, “Shut Up” in particular focuses on the challenges of confronting the struggles to continue creating meaningful, interesting art when there seem to be larger forces against you — and those forces push, shove and taunt you in every possible way.

Seemingly drawing from New York’s early 80s No Wave, art rock, noise rock and post-punk the song — and in turn, Ambro’s latest work — manages to do in a way that’s uncompromisingly, defiantly and joyously weird.