The Bad Checks

The Bad Checks Afterparty will be included with the $25 admission to the Southern Culture on the Skids show at Cat’s Cradle Back Yard. If you want tickets to just see The Bad Checks, they’re available here for just $5.The BAD CHECKS formed in Cig-City, Durham, NC, as a three-piece garage/punkabilly band in 1980, brothers, Robin and Clifton, with high school friend Larry Tally. They played their first show with Butchwax on New Wave night at the infamous Cat’s Cradle and opened for the Bad Brains at The Station. They released their first single, “I’m Paranoid”, in 1982 on their own label, Loretta Records. Spotting a potential frontman with “Crash” Landen and the Kamikazes, Hunter Landen joined the band and played his first live show in his high school graduation gown in 1984. The Checks’ released “Graveyard Tramp” in 1985 (replacing Larry with Mike Griffin) and played shows with the Dead Kennedys, Replacements, Jeffrey Lee Pierce, Sonic Youth, Mike Watt, Fishbone, Suicidal Tendencies and many others.Their second album, “Innocence” was released on the French Label Music Action and in the US on Blackpark Records. Mike Griffin returned to his studies, and the Checks burned up a few drummers over the next few years. Mike Grealing played on the next release “Live at 9:30”, Rob Ladd sat in for a while as well as Scott Carle, Jon McClain and Chuck Garrison. In 1997, the Bad Checks found ex-Smooch frontman Rock Forbes who has been drumming ever since.The Bad Checks are more than a band, they’re here to stay!Links: Facebook
Bay Ledges

Zach Hurd started Bay Ledges in his bedroom after moving to Los Angeles from a small town in coastal Maine in 2015. It began as an attempt to make fun, creative sounds with no expectation. Chopped up guitar lines, playful beats and manipulated vocals created soulful, glitchy songs with a feeling of nostalgia. The project took off when Hurd’s 2016 single, “Safe,” jumped to the number three spot on Spotify’s Global Viral Chart.In the years that followed, Bay Ledges toured all over the US and Canada, sharing the stage with such acts as Yoke Lore, Magic City Hippies and The Palms. In 2020 Hurd utilized time off the road to get back to the more personal process of making music – writing, producing and mixing his 2020 EP, New Daze. The result was a more intimate exploration and an evolution of the Bay Ledges sound.After the release of New Daze, Hurd packed his bags and relocated back to Maine. He explains, “My partner Clara and I were feeling ready for a change from Los Angeles and the idea of returning to Maine, where I’m from, was exciting. There’s a lot of nostalgia here from my youth and coming back is like seeing everything with this new perspective.”Hurd is currently working on Bay Ledges’ debut album and will be releasing the first track “Changing” on August 27th via his new label Nettwerk. He adds, “I wrote half of the song in Los Angeles and the other half after moving back to Maine earlier this year. Recording while we were staying with friends and renting short term apartments. Among other things, the song’s about saying goodbye to a time in your life and relationship, acknowledging your own growth.” “Changing” is the first step in a new chapter for Bay Ledges. Stay tuned for more to come.Links: Website | Instagram | Facebook | Spotify | YouTube | Soundcloud
Chimurenga Renaissance

Under the waters, we’re waiting with paws each larger than the head of a lion, rows of teeth, and jaws stronger than a Megaladon. Together, we are the black leviathan, panther of the deep.Chimurenga Renaissance is Baba Maraire and Hussein Kalonji.Mixed by Erik Blood, riZe vadZimu riZe also features Palaceer Lazaro, Mall Saint, M1 of Dead Prez, and THEESatisfaction. Discover it.Links: Bandcamp | Facebook | Instagram | YouTube | Spotify
The Mayflies USA

Links: Bandcamp | Twitter | Facebook | Spotify
Family Vision, Blood, The Veldt

“Plastic Form”, the second full length from New York via North Carolina punk outfit Family Vision, dives headfirst into an unhinged burst of kinetic energy. Opener “Gaze/Game” gets straight to the point, packing years of pent-up stagnation and refinement of artistic process into a sub-minute barn burner. The track list wastes no time, moving steadily through powerfully crafted hooks, adorning Kabir Kumar-Hardy’s clear and plaintive lyrical gripes with mischievous and ingenious window dressings that lack no urgency for all their catchiness.Pulling values and structures from multiple corners of the east coast underground, Family Vision’s penchant for concise statements and bleating rhythms come directly from their roots in the hardcore-leaning house show circuits of the Southeast, but are crucially injected with the ambitious and restless sonic processes of the big city post- punk canon. Arrangement choices are lifted from the harmonic playbook of Pere Ubu, Wire and Orange Juice, but take timely departure to the chiming hooks and ennui ridden lyrical spunk of their generation’s indie rock.While their 2019 self-titled was firmly lo-fi by default and necessity, the recording of “Plastic Form” took a measured step towards control of the sonic elements, harnessing a scrappy and blown-out character when desired but able to achieve bitingly clear and lushly layered textural density. Here, control allows true freedom. The band was able to let loose, hit harder, and mold their impatient sentiments into an injection of momentum to the mental system. This is music that is tired of waiting, and is anxiously capable of carving out its own path. Kabir wants to light a fire under his feet, and we can feel it burning.Links: Bandcamp | Instagram | Facebook | Spotify | Soundcloud
Spiritualized Live

SPIRITUALIZED EVERYTHING WAS BEAUTIFUL While some people imploded in the lockdowns and isolation of the epidemic, others were thriving.“I felt like I’d been in training for this my whole life” said J Spaceman in a text conversation last June or so.He was referring to his fondness of isolation and when you reframe loneliness as “beautiful solitude” then it isn’t so bad.He would walk through an empty “Roman London” where “even the sirens had stopped singing” and where the world was “full of birdsong and strangeness and no con-trails.”He used the birdsong walks to listen and try and make sense of all the music playing in his head. The mixers and mixes of his new record, a ninth studio album, weren’t working out yet.Spaceman plays 16 different instruments on Everything Was Beautiful which was put down at 11 different studios, as well as at his home. Also he employed, more than 30 musicians and singers including his daughter Poppy, long-time collaborator and friend John Coxon, string and brass sections, choirs and finger bells and chimes from the Whitechapel Bell Foundry. So, there’s a lot going on.“There was so much information on it that the slightest move would unbalance it, but going around in circles is important to me. Not like you’re spiraling out of control but you’re going around and around and on each revolution you hold onto the good each time. Sure, you get mistakes as well, but you hold on to some of those too and that’s how you kind of… achieve. Well, you get there.”Eventually the mixes got there and Everything Was Beautiful was achieved.The result is some of the most “live” sounding recordings that Spiritualized have released since the Live At The Albert Hall record of 1998, around the time of Ladies & Gentlemen, We Are Floating In Space.The opening track “Always Together With You” is a reworking / supercharging of a track originally released in demo quality in 2014. This new version is a perfect Spiritualized song; a breathtaking, hard edged, psychedelic pop tune where themes of high romance and space travel collide. In one of the most sublime refrains of the band’s career, the backing singers call out “if you gotta lonely heart too”.And don’t we all? Sometimes?On “Best Thing You Never Had”, we meet characters who blew their mind but “never had a mind to blow” over backing instrumentation that sounds like a New Orleans funeral procession band who’ve been drinking thinners all night. It’s possible this Stones at Exile-era stomp is auto-biographical, but maybe not. It’s hard to remember.“Let It Bleed (For Iggy)’’ is heavy eye-lids and the romantic intricacies of emotional intimacies, a honeyed song that careers into choir-fueled intensity. A country number “Crazy” is even sweeter, a lorazepam Tammy Wynette ballad with backing vocals by Nikki Lane.Spaceman: “When we were mixing, I relied a little bit on what I knew of Ladies And Gentlemen…, that if you start throwing mixes together, it stops sounding like what you already know from the past. Andy Capper Sept 2021 Links: Website | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook | Spotify | YouTube | Soundcloud
mc chris

mc chris (always intentionally spelled lowercase) is having a moment. You’ve probably already heard of him or heard him; you just don’t know it. His voice is playing most nights on Adult Swim. Thanks to streaming, his shows (Sealab 2021, Aqua Teen Hunger Force, and many more) are finding their way to new audiences and die-hards alike. Thanks to Disney+’s The Book of Boba Fett, his lyrics have found their way into most articles about the show, into most YouTube reviews of the show, into most Fett oriented Twitch and TikTok videos. His lyrics are just part of language because he’s influenced a generation. Twitter personalities and huge companies are getting in on the act, even X-BOX was dropping some mc chris lines in recent tweets in response to Fortnite’s Boba Fett DLC. He has become an integral part of the zeitgeist. His fans call him legend, icon and king. He’s thought of as a game changer. His influence on comedy, animation and rap is unparalleled. It’s almost as if all red strings stem from the efforts of mc chris as he pioneered things like Adult Swim and Nerdcore. These days he’s a single dad coming out of Covid and divorce with a determination to do what’s best for his son who he cares for full time. For two long years he has not been able to tour, cutting short a successful and groundbreaking 15-year run, but now that Covid restrictions have eased, mc is going back out one more time. Join him and Maine based Crunk Witch as they make their way across the country for another go, bittersweet as it may be. He will be appearing in Adult Swim’s “Aquadonk Side Pieces,” later this year and his 19th release “King in Black” will be coming out in conjunction with his tour. Catch him while you can! Who knows when and if he will return.Links: Website | Bandcamp | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook | Spotify | YouTube
Carolina Waves Showcase & Open Mic

K97.5’s Mir.I.am hosts a special Carolina Waves Open Mic at Cat’s Cradle – Back Room! It’s our first live ticketed show at the Cradle since 2019! Come perform, network, build your buzz, participate in the live cypher and possibly get booked! All ages. Carolina Waves was named the Best Open Mic in the Triangle by Indy Week back to back years. Early arrival highly suggested. $10 entry all night. 1 song allowed. Must sign up at door. Free to perform. Free for all UNC students with Student ID. Singers/ rappers/ dancers, all talents welcome. Sounds: DJ Remedy Doors & Sign up at 7:30. Show 8! FLASH DRIVES ONLY! We are always scouting for upcoming Carolina Waves Shows and other opportunities. Bring your A game and your squad. Email [email protected] with questions
Stereolab

Links: Website | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook | Spotify | YouTube
Remo Drive

A slice of tremolo-heavy classic rock filtered through the lens of the gunslinging American West, REMO DRIVE’s third LP, A PORTRAIT OF AN UGLY MAN, is in many ways a return to form for the Minnesota-based indie-rock duo. The album, with its acrobatic guitar work, deeply self-referential lyrics and off-the-walls energy, calls back to the dextrous, eccentric sound that helped the band – brothers Erik (vocals, guitar) and Stephen (bass) Paulson – explode into the underground with their debut album, 2017’s Greatest Hits. And, like the band’s earliest material, it took shape in an equally unassuming place: their parents’ basement.When the Paulsons stumbled across a Tascam recording desk on Facebook Marketplace in 2019, they thought it might make a nice starting point to demo songs for their then-forthcoming third LP. But $250 and a few weeks later, they found themselves fully entrenched in making the actual album itself. Not only that, but the safety and security of their parents’ home provided a welcome respite for the brothers, who have learned they’re most creative without a ticking clock and prying eyes peeking over their shoulders.“Our workflow is naturally different from what most producers and studios like to do,” Erik explains. “We take things in our own weird approach and order. There’s a sense of privacy working at home. It doesn’t feel like you’re working with the door open during the incubation process.”The resulting album, due out June 26 on Epitaph, finds the band truly in their element – both physically and sonically. Whereas the Paulsons filtered their buoyant songwriting through the concise lens of storytellers like Bruce Springsteen and The Killers on Natural, Everyday Degradation, A Portrait of an Ugly Man is more spontaneous, bolstered by the same charm and levity that made Greatest Hits such an underground favorite.“I wanted to get back to playing guitar the way I used to, and then throw songwriting on top of that,” Erik says. “On the last album, I approached playing guitar in a more songwriter-y way. I had really scaled it back so it wouldn’t be as hard for me to sing and play simultaneously, but the guitar is way more forward again now.” Self-produced and mixed by the duo, A Portrait of an Ugly Man feels all at once familiar and fresh: The basement breathed a looseness into songs like “If I’ve Ever Looked Too Deep In Thought” and “Ode to Joy,” while the freedom of the sessions left the band able to explore the next evolution of their sound.As such, the 10-song set tips its hat to both the classic rock the brothers grew up on as well as previously untapped influences: Erik namechecks desert-rock artists like Queens of the Stone Age while admitting The Good, The Bad and The Ugly soundtrack and his binge-watching of old Westerns contributed to the album’s tumbleweed pastiche. But this time around, the guiding hands of their musical influences is less overt, a conscious decision the band address on album standout “Star Worship,” which preaches the need to eschew reverence for others and instead trust in yourself.Links: Website | Bandcamp | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | YouTube