Ozzy Osbourne Withstood the Darkness

Photo by Ross Halfin

In the end, even Ozzy seemed surprised. It wasn’t the crowd — 45,000 people did show up to Villa Park in Birmingham on July 5th for his Back to the Beginning farewell concert, but that’s light work for the Prince of Darkness, who played to a quarter of a million in 1974. It might have been that after decades of arguments and splits and lawsuits and actual fisticuffs, all four members of Black Sabbath were finally sharing a stage again.

But I think it was something even deeper than that. When the marquee rose high above the stage that night, it revealed the godfather of heavy metal seated on an obsidian throne. (Osbourne had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease some years earlier, impacting his ability to walk.) 

“Let me see those fucking hands!” he cried out to all-consuming cheers. As his eyes bugged out and as he swayed with Tony and Bill and Geezer, I think what astonished him was not that he was there, but that he was at all. That decades after he first laid waste to what Rage Against the Machine guitarist Tom Morello called the “hippy, flower-power psychedelia,” he was not only still alive, but able to enjoy the still-flourishing fruits of his labor. 

Just two weeks later, the frontman for Black Sabbath and perhaps the most consequential living figure in rock music passed away surrounded by his family. 

It was not the kind of death that the world expected from him. Millions of inches of column space have been devoted to his on and off-stage antics: eating doves and bats, pissing in record executives’ wineglasses, pissing on a memorial to the Alamo, et cetera et cetera. His long battle with drug and alcohol abuse is also, to put it mildly, well-documented. His first visit to rehab was in 1984, and he appears to have struggled with addiction right up to retirement age, telling Variety that he had relapsed in his early sixties, then quit again around the age of 65.

“I should have been dead 1,000 times,” he said in the interview. “I’m not being big-headed about that, or invincible. It doesn’t take much to kill you.”

Ozzy knew that even before he took up drugs. He’s often described his childhood in industrial Birmingham in the 1960s, which was marked by domestic strife, violence, and poverty. In 2003, he shocked listeners when, in typically frank Ozzy fashion, he disclosed his experiences with sexual abuse.

“Two boys used to wait for me to come home after school. Then they would fuck around with me,” he told the Mirror. “They didn’t fuck me, but they messed about with me. They would force me to drop my pants and all that shit. They felt me and touched me… and it was terrible. The first time it happened was in front of my sister, and that affected me even more. It became a regular thing on the way home from school. It seemed to go on forever."

Ozzy was 11. 

"I was afraid to tell my mother or father,” he said. “My parents would fight a lot, and money was scarce. There were eight of us living in a two-bedroom house. Then that happened and for the rest of my childhood I was forever running with fear.”

It’s still startling to think that fourteen years before #MeToo took hold, a male celebrity spoke about his experiences with sexual assault with that degree of candor. Particularly someone like Ozzy, who built his empire off music that spoke to disaffected, and at times misogynistic and predatory, men. Marilyn Manson, for example, made a video appearance on the Back to the Beginning livestream to profess his love for Ozzy. His inclusion, following multiple allegations of rape and abuse, was a source of confusion and outrage for many fans. 

I don't mean to sympathize with the devil. Ozzy’s associations are weighty. As the center of gravity in the rock universe, any co-sign or even acknowledgement from him translates to clout and money. That those resources would go towards men who (allegedly) choose to abuse others is appalling, regardless of his own experiences. 

I guess what’s been on my mind following Ozzy’s death is how his experiences, in his words, “completely fucked [him] up.” Because what were the options back then for a working-class boy in Birmingham? There weren’t resources for survivors, period. And even if there were, the stigma specifically stalking men and boys who survived sexual abuse likely would have been too great to bear. Even now, in a post-#MeToo landscape, the conversation on male victims usually ends in a punchline.

“When I was a kid, people did not talk about these things like they do now. You didn't have chat shows talking about child molestation,” he said in 2003. "I worked it out with a therapist. But if you have a traumatic experience when you are young, it does fuck you up.”

I doubt it had even occurred to Ozzy at the time that he had been unjustly denied safety, that he deserved recourse. Probably he just folded it into his understanding of the world: people will take advantage of you in the most intimate and barbaric ways, and that’s just how it is. The question — and this is the case, I think, for everyone affected by sexual violence — is how do you make your peace with it?

I wonder if Ozzy ever figured that one out. Beyond sexual violence, he certainly had no shortage of hardship to deal with. He attempted suicide several times as a teen, then fell headlong into drugs and drinking. Even after that interview with the Mirror, he would go on to relapse, which suggests that he didn’t quite “work it out” in therapy. In fact, that question of how to go on seemed to haunt him. Through the decades of altered and muted consciousness, he never took his gaze off the darkness within. 

That fascination both inspired his most creative work and put his life in peril. After he was kicked out of Sabbath in 1979, Ozzy said he took the money from the split and locked himself in a hotel room for three months to do drugs. 

“My thinking was, 'This is my last party, because after this I'm going back to Birmingham and the dole,’” he told Classic Rock.

Ozzy was so certain that this world was not for him — that despite his success, he would eventually be consumed by his own darkness. He was wrong. His greatest power as a musician has always been his ability to sublimate grief and pain into art. I don’t know if Ozzy made peace with his darkness, but I think he did learn that while it’s easy to succumb to it, it’s infinitely more interesting to make something out of it. And if you stick around, you’ll be lucky enough to see what good comes from it. 

Despite it all — despite the drugs, despite the poverty, despite the fear, despite the fights, despite the darkness within — when he mounted that stage, his wide eyes took in all the good. I think Ozzy was surprised by just how good it could be.


Nikolai Mather (he/him) is a writer and musician based in North Carolina. His favorite Ozzy tunes are “Jack the Stripper/Fairies Wear Boots” and the one he did with Miss Piggy. He’s taking a social media break, so reach him at nmather@whqr.org.

Different Parts of the Same Elephant: An Interview With Dustin Hayes of Walter Mitty and His Makeshift Orchestra

Photo by Lisa Johnson

People always say never to meet your heroes, but what if you get to meet your hero twice because you don’t understand how Google Meet works?

It might make you a little tired trying to keep up with everything that singer-songwriter Dustin Hayes is connected to. He cofounded the record label and art collective Making New Enemies, which has released an armful of records alongside a late-night-esque comedy show, a lo-fi surf film, and an annual community collaborative album called Group Picture, currently fourteen iterations deep. Hayes directed and edited a “mumblecore soap opera” short film called Library Card. He’s dabbled in podcasting, blogging, and photography. He’s even been a ping-pong referee.

At the center of this rich, creative universe lies beloved folk-punk band Walter Mitty and His Makeshift Orchestra, as well as its electric, more experimental sibling, Walter Etc., which Dustin founded after Walter Mitty took a hiatus way back in 2015. Since the band’s founding, virtually all of Dustin’s latest musical work has been under the Walter Etc. name, aside from a compilation of Walter Mitty B-sides and oddities in 2019. 

But that all changes with Yikes Almighty, Walter Mitty’s first new album in over ten years. Mixing the DIY acoustic colors characteristic of Walter Mitty with new sounds echoing the experimentation of his Walter Etc. offerings, Yikes Almighty is a soul-searching snapshot of where Dustin is currently in his life. Hayes’ honest songwriting takes on new shapes as his lyrics filter through the sieve of adulthood, yet never lose their poignancy or authenticity. 

After meeting once from the comfort of our own homes and failing to properly record our interview, Dustin was nice enough to meet again for a second interview to talk about the circumstances leading up to Yikes Almighty, the album’s eclectic rollout, spirituality in your early 30s, and what exactly the point of the whole Walter-verse is.


This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

SWIM: Thank you for being so flexible. I’m so sorry that this entire thing happened. Apparently, I don’t know how to work technology, despite what I say on my resume.

DUSTIN: No worries. I would have done the exact same thing. 

SWIM: I was like, oh, yeah, I see a red recording dot! We’re good to go. Realize after the interview that it’s not a recording dot, it’s just letting me know I’m using my microphone. Oh. It’s probably going to be a little bit of a repeat of Monday for the most part. I’m bummed because we had a really good conversation on Monday, but... 

DUSTIN: It’s all good! 

SWIM: What can you do, man. Anyway, how are you doing? 

DUSTIN: Good. This was just reminding me of my ultimate Zoom mistake where I threw an online party for Group Picture. It was the first time I did a Zoom party, and I didn’t realize you can’t just throw the Zoom link out on social media without something happening, so I shared the link on Twitter and I was like, “We’re live now!” And then we got all these bots coming into the chat, and then there’s just porn on the screen. I was like, “Holy shit!” And then they appropriated one of our friends’ usernames, so it looked like our friend was talking in the chat and saying all these terrible things.

SWIM: Dude, that’s so funny. My girlfriend and I have a book club with our friends, and that happened to us too! We don’t even know how this person got in, but they did the same thing. My girlfriend’s sister’s name is Maria, and they joined under “Maria’s iPhone.” So everyone’s like, “Okay, cool, Maria’s here!” They join and they’re just streaming Pornhub, so everyone’s like “Oh my god, what is she doing?!” Then we realize that it’s not her because she actually tried to join after!

DUSTIN: This is the Wild West out here. 

SWIM: I know, honestly, if you’re in a public Zoom, it is the Wild West. So let’s just take it back to square one. Earlier this week, we talked about Yikes Almighty being the first Walter Mitty album in ten years. I want to ask you more about the recording process because before we even knew about this album, you were posting pictures of yourself in a room hitting this triangle-like instrument, showing off toy pianos and all these new sorts of sounds for a Walter Mitty record. How did that come about? What were you going through at the time? Where were you listening to? 

DUSTIN: I don’t know if I really remember exactly what I was listening to, but I was definitely just kind of getting back to my roots in those sounds. The very first Walter Mitty record I had to make in a bedroom because I didn’t have access to anything. I just had an acoustic guitar and random stuff around me. So that’s kind of always been like the home base for me with recording. 

When I was making Yikes Almighty, I didn’t have a home and I went to our drummer Chris’s house out in Denver, so it was kind of just back to square one. I was going around his house looking through things to hit [for percussion]. That’s why I was hitting the pan lid! But then I took it a step further on this album – I went to a thrift store and I bought a bunch of kid’s toys and started messing with those. So I could have, you know, used more real instruments, but the circumstances kind of gave me a “back to the beginning, back to the basics.”

SWIM: Right. Almost like a full circle, in a sense. 

DUSTIN: Yeah, exactly. A little full circle as far as the production and where I was at in life. 

SWIM: I feel like... in some ways, this is kind of a full-circle Walter Mitty album. For example, the last track on Yikes Almighty is “101 S.” I think a lot of listeners, especially if they’ve been Walter Heads for a long time, they’re going to notice that title right away: “101 N” is one of your most popular songs. Are those two connected?

DUSTIN: There’s definitely a connection for me, like, in my head and life, but I think musically or lyrically… “101 S” is not a continuation of “101 N.” I guess the vibes behind them are kind of similar. “101 N” was about leaving home when I was a kid in Orange County and moving out for my first time when I was eighteen and being scared and excited and hitting the road and taking the 101 North Freeway into the Great Unknown. Then “101 S” is from my thirties when I left my life in Ventura and I moved south to LA, and it also felt like leaving it all behind, going into the Great Unknown. This was the unknown of Los Angeles and a life with no job and no home, no partner and no band or… anything. I was just living out of my truck in LA. “101 S” just made sense because it was the same exact feeling as “101 N” of going off into the great unknown in a new moment of life, but this was the reverse of the original. So yeah, they’re pretty spiritually connected. In my head, it’s like yin and yang, but to a random listener, it’s probably just another song. [Laughs]

SWIM: I love that. I want to circle back to the treasure hunt album rollout. It’s just such a badass idea! I remember you talking briefly about an author that was a huge source of inspiration for it?

DUSTIN: It was really a confluence of things, but there was this author named Forrest Fenn who had a treasure- I’ve never read Forrest Fenn or anything, I just know the lore- but he had a treasure with these Native American artifacts, Spanish gold, and very valuable things worth over a million dollars then buried it in the Rocky Mountains. He just left a poem that was the treasure map to find it, and it was a big deal… I think there’s a Netflix documentary about it? 

So my dad told me about that, and he would always joke that we should go find the treasure! [Laughs] I always thought it was super sick. So the idea was in my head, like, I want to do something like that one day! And then my friend Sarah was telling me about a sculptor she knows who buries their sculptures in the desert for people to dig up. And I was like, that’s the coolest, most romantic thing I’ve ever heard. So when I heard Sarah tell me that, it reminded me of the Fenn treasure and it all kind of just clicked in my head. I was like, “Oh, I have to bury an album one day!” And then I was like, “I’m just going to bury my next album because life is short,” you know? 

SWIM: I mean, there’s no better time than the present, right? 

DUSTIN: Exactly. 

SWIM: Does that whole idea have anything to do with the name Yikes Almighty? I feel like that sounds something like finding something or some sort of adventure, but maybe one where you don’t like what you find.

DUSTIN: I love that. I love that. They don’t have any literal connection, but energetically, it felt the same. I had the name Yikes Almighty before the treasure hunt really got underway, so they didn’t really have anything to do with each other. Yikes Almighty is just jumping off and taking a big risk and just going for something, even if it’s messy or doesn’t make sense right away, and just trusting your gut and going for it. So the essence of the treasure hunt is very much in line with that same philosophy. 

SWIM: I love it, dude, it’s such an interesting idea. I had never heard of anything like it, and you’re giving me all these references that have already been done. Last time we talked, we discussed writing and how you had wanted to write about your touring adventures and all that fun stuff, but one thing I wanted to check in on is watercolor painting! Are you still a painter? 

Dustin [Laughs] Definitely goes in phases, you know. It’ll go in phases where I’ll do a bunch at once and then stop for like months. I recently did this thing for the album [holds up a water color illustration themed around ‘Yikes Almighty’]. But besides that, I haven’t really been watercoloring too much. I’ll get back into it, though. I’d like to. 

SWIM: Yeah, I’d imagine you got a lot coming up, so I get if it’s not, you know, the primary goal right now to become a watercolor artist. I just wanted to know because I remember you posted this funny story on Patreon about how you came into contact with this watercolor artist. Was it Craigslist? Or am I getting it confused with something else? 

DUSTIN: It was! 

SWIM: [Laughs] That’s so random. That’s so cool, though. I miss Craigslist so much. Well, I mean, I guess it’s still there, but like when it was, you know… before Offer Up and all those apps and stuff. 

DUSTIN: Yeah, it’s not quite as active anymore. But you know how it is. I have a lot of things I wish I could pursue and get good at, but I don’t even try! I always get sidetracked and start making more music.

SWIM: I know, it’s hard to find time. I mean, speaking of busy schedules, I know you have the Taxpayers tour coming up, and I know we talked about the Apes of the State show happening in LA in October, and you just wrapped up your solo living room tour. How is the touring experience on your own compared to touring with a band?

DUSTIN: Oh, it’s so different. Some quick pros and cons: On the solo tour, it’s like, I have all day. It’s just my own schedule. You don’t have to show up as early when it’s just you on an acoustic guitar, you know? I was going to skate parks and surfing and posting up in a park and just playing guitar or reading and it was so chill. Then after the show, I’m just getting in the car. I don’t have a lot of money, so I was just sleeping in my car. In Santa Rosa, I was like, ‘I guess I’m just going to drive out to the coast tonight and sleep in Bedego Bay and wake up on the NorCal coast and look for waves.’ 

But after a show, good or bad, it’s just… everyone kind of leaves, and then I’m just like, “Oh, all right!’ There’s not really anyone to hang with at the end of the night, and I’m just alone in the car, just with my thoughts. It’s so lonely! I don’t have a bandmate to be like, “How was your night?” You’re truly alone. Pros and cons with a band… It’s fun to share the excitement and the adventure with your friends, but it’s a lot easier to travel and do logistical things as a solo person. 

SWIM: Yeah, I can imagine. There’s so much logistics, and especially considering how expensive it is now to tour… I can only imagine how much of a pain in the ass it is to just coordinate everything with everybody. 

DUSTIN: Yeah, that’s true, too. Money-wise, it’s actually feasible alone. It’s not as a band. And then you’re thinking about where we are going to stay? Are we getting a hotel? But hanging out with my old friends, the bandmates, is just invaluable. 

SWIM: It’s priceless.

DUSTIN: Right. I can’t put a dollar on it.

Photo by Ricardo Campos Molina

SWIM: I know we kind of talked about “101 S” earlier, but I really want to go back to the lyrics on this album because you’re such a great lyricist, and the first thing I want to talk about is that spiritual tinge that we touched on a little bit on Monday. I remember you saying that you’re not a born-again Christian or anything like that, but there is definitely a little bit of spirituality on this record. Going back to the older Walter Mitty records, there are lines like “Now it’s God that thinks that I don’t actually exist” and “This is why pseudo-intellectual tells us that we need our vices.” It felt like you were kind of turning away from that sort of idea, but in this record, you say, ‘I’m talking to, you know, girls that are smarter than me and I’m trying to convince them that there’s a higher purpose.’ There’s a very distinct shift into “maybe there is some truth to all this spiritual stuff?” and you’re trying to show others that. 

DUSTIN: Totally. I definitely haven’t become a Christian or joined any organized religion, but I think there’s more room for it in my life now. It’s funny because I feel like with younger kids now God is kind of cool, but when I was younger God was very uncool. If you were alternative and into punk music, you were against the church and organized religion and all of that dogma. 

SWIM: Yeah. They’d call you a poser if they found out you went to church!

DUSTIN: Exactly, yeah. And not that that’s right or wrong, but, yeah, that’s where I was coming from when I was younger, like 19 to 25 or whatever. It was pushing away any sort of spirituality or religion and not accepting it. And as I’ve grown older, there really is a place for this. It kind of turned from a philosophy of “everything’s meaningless” to “yes, everything’s meaningless, but we create our own reality- whatever meaning you put into that void is actually going to have meaning.” So it’s not meaningless! It’s just a customized spiritual, meaningful existence you create for yourself. 

So that’s where I feel like this new album is coming from, philosophically. A little more of allowing myself to feel love and not just being cynical. Like “love’s just a trick we play on ourselves.” Now it’s more allowing myself to believe in that or allowing myself to think about a higher power and assign myself a higher purpose. So there definitely is a spiritual, philosophical evolution between Old Walter and New Walter. I think it’s just a little less angsty and young and a little more calm and confident in the chaos. 

SWIM: Right. And I think you said you’ve given yourself grace to accept that love for yourself and others, which I love for you, and I think it makes perfect sense. We’re almost the same age. I feel like I’ve also gone through more of an acceptance or more of an open mind to that stuff. We almost had the same exact character arc [Laughs]. I was also like “fuck religion! Church sucks!” I was probably very insufferable, but that’s part of growing up. 

DUSTIN: It’s part of growing up, yeah.

Walter Etc. backyard show in Long Beach, CA. Photo by Nickolas Sackett.

SWIM: Speaking of growing up, there’s one thing that really surprised me listening to this record: you make a lot of references to having children in this record.

DUSTIN: Damn. That’s probably true. [Laughs]

SWIM: Do you want children?

DUSTIN: Theoretically, yeah. 

SWIM: Have you become more open to that as you’ve gotten older?

DUSTIN: Well, I was never against having kids. I would love to have kids. I love kids. Yeah. I love kids. Always have. I haven’t had a lot of jobs throughout my life, but I have always been nannying and babysitting and teaching. But it’s more a matter of if I can have some more stability and money and stuff like that. You know what I mean? 

SWIM: Yeah, I know. I totally understand.

DUSTIN: And then there’s the whole, ‘is it ethical to bring a kid into a dying world?’ but that’s a whole other conversation. But kids are awesome. How about you? 

SWIM: It’s funny you ask that because, again, same character arc- I was not really for having kids because of the whole ethical dilemma, and also my childhood experience of not really knowing my dad. But I’ve gotten older. I’ve been working at the same school for about five years, and the fifth graders who were promoted to sixth grade this year were in first grade when I started. So it was very strange seeing these students for five years and watching them grow and become their own persons and go through shit and see their wins and their losses. It just made me see how important children are and how wonderful they are. As I’ve gotten older, I see the allure of having a family of your own and having that chance to create a little person who has their own thoughts and feelings in the world. For them to carry the torch, but not in some weird patriarchal way. They’re like an artwork, you know? 

DUSTIN: For sure. 

SWIM: I struggled with the same things: bringing a child into the dying world, stability, all that fun stuff. But definitely stuck out to me on the album because I don’t think I’ve ever heard you sing about children. I want to circle back to this Patreon post you made about people having this preconstructed idea of Dustin based on your songs. You shared that this is a source of discomfort when people act like they know who you are based on the songs you write, or they have this very clear idea of who you are before they even get a chance to actually talk to you. Does that still affect you?

DUSTIN: I don’t want to overplay it. It’s not like I’m famous or something [Laughs]. But in my direct life, with friends and family, for sure. The first few Walter albums, there was just literally no one listening to us, you know? Maybe some friends, but my parents weren’t really listening, and I could just kind of say whatever. There weren’t any consequences in my real life, so I developed this personal, artistic philosophy where I’m really writing about my life and being super honest and vulnerable and… sometimes very specific in these songs. 

There’s a divide between the world of Walter and the world of Dustin, but the songs are usually like 90% true to my life and like 10% poetic license. But as time has gone on and more friends and family have become fully aware of the band, they’ve accepted it as, ‘This is what Dustin does!’ I know they’re going to hear stuff when I release it, and it does create more of a block or an obstacle, so I have to just be a little bit reckless and kind of trick myself while I’m writing things and be like “okay, I never actually have to release this or show it to anybody just so I can write it as purely and honestly and true to what I want.” Then I decide later if I’m going to release it, and once I like it, I’m just like, ‘fuck it,’ and I release it. [Laughs] 

But then I deal with the consequences in my life, like people get mad at me or get confused about things, uncomfortable. And they assume because my songs are so literal and raw that they just assume everything is 100% true, so if there’s a little bit of fictionalizing or poetic license taken here and there in a song, it’s taken as 100% fact. It’s just a funny life I’ve chosen for myself, but ultimately, I still have that mission to be as pure, honest, raw, and prolific of an artist in my lifetime as I can be. It’s still my number one priority and value, so I’m just sticking to it, and everything else can come second.

SWIM: Take it to the chin, like we said last time!

DUSTIN: [Laughs] Yeah, that’s what we were saying. Yeah, take it to the chin. Be brave and keep it going. 

SWIM: Love it, dude. I think that’s a pretty noble goal to have in a creative life. 

DUSTIN: I don’t know if it is, though. Is it? I don’t know. I feel like it is. I don’t know what people’s goals are. 

SWIM: I guess that goes back to the meaning you crave for yourself, right? 

DUSTIN: It is! That’s true.

SWIM: All right, I just have the last question that I asked you last time. I brought up this whole concept that many artists have talked about in the past. I know James Baldwin is probably the most famous example of this quote; he says something along the lines that he’s essentially writing the same story over and over and over again, but he’s just adding a different perspective on it. I feel like you’ve also touched on that briefly in your music. In “Um” from Always Leaving, you say, “the same chord progressions, but my lyrics were better back then.” What is Walter’s story, and do you think you’re constantly writing it and rewriting it? 

DUSTIN: Yeah. It’s a really interesting thought. I used to think - I think I still think this, but I’ve kind of lost the thread on this theory. There was a time I felt really strongly that all art is about the same thing. Like everyone’s art is about the same thing. If you zoom out far enough, it’s all trying to say the same thing and kind of describing different parts of the same elephant. So speaking just for all Walter songs, that same zooming out and describing different parts of the same elephant is true. I can’t, or any other writer, can’t get out of themselves. Everything is their own experience. So whether you’re writing about yourself or writing about other people, you’re ultimately writing about your experience of the world. 

I feel all Walter’s songs are about this journey through life, and maybe the elephant is the timeline of life as we experience it, and each song is describing a little chunk of that Walter timeline. Ultimately, at least in Walter’s songs, the writing is about struggles with mental health and knowing yourself. And then knowing how to deal with yourself and relationships with other people and how to deal with people. And then the third conflict is usually with the world and society and how to stay sane and make your life in the crazy, chaotic, crumbling world. So yeah, I think all Walter’s songs are kind of just about life’s journey for me.

SWIM: I love that, dude. You’re very existential. Have you read existential philosophy before? 

DUSTIN: [Laughs] Not really.

SWIM: Really? That’s surprising. Because earlier you talked about creating your own meaning, and that’s the core tenet of existentialist philosophies. Existence precedes essence, which means you have to create; you’re not born with a meaning, you create your own meaning. And then you’re talking about this mingling of Self with the Other and all that.

DUSTIN: That’s funny. Well, I mean, I listen to some philosophy podcasts and I’ve read some books and stuff, but it’s not like I’m a philosopher or something, you know? 

SWIM: I mean, you kind of are, in some sense. Aren’t we all? 

Thank you guys so much. I can’t thank you guys enough for being so flexible. 

LIZZIE: Yeah, all good! 

DUSTIN: Lizzie, you’ve been here the whole time?!

LIZZIE: [Laughs] Yeah, I was. I’ve been, you know, answering emails at the same time.

DUSTIN: I hope you had us muted. I am embarrassed to know you’ve been listening.

[Everyone laughs] 

SWIM: Thank you so much. I hope you guys enjoy the rest of your week. Thank you, Dustin! It was great. It’s a dream come true to talk to you, twice even. 

DUSTIN: No, it was fun. I hope to talk to you again on a show or something!

SWIM: I’m definitely planning on seeing you guys with Apes of the State. So hopefully, I’ll be able to say what’s up.

DUSTIN: Perfect. You should reach out!

SWIM: All right! You guys take care. Thank you guys. 

EVERYONE: Bye-bye!

The recording has stopped


Nickolas is an artist based in Southern California. Described by a beloved elementary teacher as an “absolute pleasure to have in class,” his work wrestles with the conflict between privacy and self-expression in the digital age. You can find him shitposting on Twitter @DjQuicknut and on Instagram @sopranos_on_dvd_.

Greet Death – Die In Love | Album Review

Deathwish Inc.

As an artist, there are seemingly two paths you can go down after your first couple of records: either you shake things up and go in a new direction, or you become more of who you are. When you try something new, you take the risk of falling flat on your face after taking too big of a swing, but you also might connect and break through to an entirely new audience. When you refine yourself, you hazard turning your work into a trite carbon copy of itself, but you also might succeed in adding layers of nuance to your art. Flint, Michigan’s Greet Death opts for the latter on their third album, Die In Love, tinkering with their established gloomgaze sound by folding in new elements and enhancing what was already there.

On their debut, Dixieland, co-lead singers and songwriters Logan Gaval and Harper Boyhtari were making loud and lean songs that alternated between hard-charging alternative rock and dour slowcore. 2019’s masterwork New Hell saw the addition of Jim Versluis on drums and was a focused improvement on Dixieland as the songs were longer, heavier, and most importantly, shreddier. New Low, the rare EP that’s vital to a band’s discography, contains elements that range from Neil Young-esque country (harmonica included!) to speedy, sometimes radio-friendly shoegaze. 

But it’s not just in their sound that Greet Death has changed, in the time since New Hell, they’ve grown from a three-piece to a gang of five adding Jackie Kalmink, who serves a dual roles as bassist and producer, as well as Eric Beck on guitar, resulting in a richer sound and fuller approach to their music. It’s also important to mention that, in the time since their last release, Harper Boyhtari came out as trans, making it impossible not to recognize how both she and the band are growing more comfortable in their skin. And now, Die In Love finds the band deepening their craft, resulting in their most balanced effort and an album that displays all of their talents in equal measure. 

Right out of the gates, Greet Death send a message with the title track “Die In Love,” a fantastic blend of shoegaze sirens and indie pop which finds Logan Gaval stating the album’s intent loud and clear, “Find someone, die in love.” In the past, labeling this band as “misanthropic” would not have been much of a stretch, given songs like “I Hate Everything” and “You’re Gonna Hate What You’ve Done,” but with this album, Gaval and Boyhtari are now exploring the bliss of love. Don’t get me wrong, there’s still plenty of their trademark misery, but their new stance on life is “we’re all gonna die, might as well love someone before I do.” Boyhtari closes the album with a similar sentiment on the tender acoustic ballad “Love Me When You Leave.” Like many of Boyhtari’s best songs, the track is built around vivid characters; people grappling with the uncertainty of life, what they wish to make of it, and whether or not any of this is really worth it. Ultimately, the song’s conclusion is a simple but bold request as she sings, “Leave a sign for me / love me when you leave.” Regardless of how this all shakes out, keep me in your heart and cherish the memories we share.

Greet Death has always peddled in life’s ugliness, but on Die In Love, they're highlighting the fact that for life to be ugly, it must also be beautiful. On the sexually charged simp anthem, aptly titled “Red Rocket,” Gaval brings new meaning to wanting to be someone’s dog by capturing the feeling of being so horny that you might die, listing the macabre desires of climaxing. If telling someone “I could bring your fork to socket” isn’t romantic, then I don’t know what is. 

Boyhtari’s richly detailed “Country Girl” sidesteps the sentimentality of nostalgia in favor of the melancholy present in the past. Throughout the song, she combs through memories, picking out images of death like burnt churches alongside the comforts of seeing horror movies in the theater. Then, there’s the lead single, “Same But Different Now,” a five-minute ripper where the group displays some of their pummeling material to date. The track crescendos to an incendiary mix of charging riffs as Gaval shrieks, “We’re different now.” It’s a fascinating moment in the band’s discography because it holds the glowering moods present in much of their work, but they’re also pushing their sound into the red, culminating in something that resembles the more aggro side of Foo Fighters’ rawest songs.

Even though Boyhtari and Gaval trade vocals between songs, it is clear that Greet Death is a cohesive unit. When their two voices entwine on the final minutes of the record, there’s a beautiful sense of balance and completion. You realize that, ever since their first release almost a decade ago, even after all the sonic pivots and lineup shifts, Greet Death has always been these two people coming together to create something beautiful and crushing and honest. As the band has expanded physically and sonically, their sense of self has only become more realized. On each passing release, the band grows with intentionality, and on Die In Love, they have achieved their purest form yet by being true to who they are.


Connor is an English professor in the Bay Area, where he lives with his partner and their cat and dog, Toni and Hachi. When he isn’t listening to music or writing about killer riffs, Connor is reading fiction and obsessing over sports.

Swimming Abroad: International Music Roundup

To quote Frank Reynolds, “you have to be a real low-life piece of shit to get involved in politics.” I think the same thing applies to being overly patriotic, especially now, as the United States Government proudly rolls out our very own concentration camp and revokes healthcare for millions upon millions of its own citizens. Shit’s fucked in every direction, so Independence Day doesn’t feel like a whole lot to celebrate. 

To me, the Fourth of July begins and ends with barbequing hot dogs, drinking some beers, and jumping in the pool, and guess what? I did all that shit yesterday. While last year we had a fun BBQ music roundup on the Fourth, this year we thought the holiday might be a fun excuse to highlight some of our favorite music projects from other countries. 

Please enjoy the music, please celebrate responsibly, and please consider the role we all play in this. 


baan – neumann

Self-released

The universality of music is one of the most beautiful things about humanity. A sound can be shaped in Philadelphia, and years later, a band from Namibia has made it their entire style. When it comes to heavy music, some of the most incredible records made often lie outside of American audiences’ line of sight; however, within the internet era, we are seeing a globalization of art that rocks at unprecedented levels in human history. Enter baan from Busan, South Korea—a band as heavy and thunderous as they are deft and talented. neumann is a journey–nine tracks with entire realms existing within them. In an era where playlists and short-form songs are championed across the music industry, an album that offers depth AND patience can feel very rare, especially when it can actually alter your perception of time. There were more than a few times where a song on neumann felt like a meditative 15 minutes when it really was less than that, or conversely, felt over in moments for tracks that ran over six minutes. An album that, whether it likes it or not, is as thoroughly about the act of listening as it is about the haunting abstraction of being alive in modern times, baan’s first release is dense, heady, and a prime example of how musicians outside of the states are just as worthy of our curiosity and attention as any here at home.
– Elias Amini


Sport – In Waves 

La Tête d’Ampoule

The “Midwest” part of “Midwest Emo Revival” really has nothing to do with geography. It’s a holdover from the second wave of emo, known simply as “Midwest Emo,” which happened mostly in the 90s. Back then, a lot of popular acts really were from the heartland (also a lot weren’t, but hey, the name stuck). In the late 2000s and throughout the 2010s, that sound was revived by bands from all over, including those outside the US. Between 2011 and 2016, Sport cooked up three emo albums from Lyon, France. Even an ocean away, they brought every bit the same energy, talent, and quintessential sound as bands like Algernon Cadwallader and Glocca Morra—and after nine years, they’re back with another. 

In Waves is aptly named. Each song swells, crests, crashes, and regathers itself in troughs of lingering reminiscence. Their sound is full-bodied, with gang vocals punching through walls of angular riffs, twinkling arpeggiations, and dynamic percussion. Though they skew towards math rock, Sport is unmistakably emo. Between the poetic verses and impressive wordplay, you can hear the mourning of days gone by and anxiety for the future. At the same time, you hear catharsis, conviction, and a passion for life. 

Sport’s 4th album is for every emo enjoyer; it expands on themes from previous albums and breathes new life into their discography. In a recent interview, Sport says they picked their name because it’s the same in most languages. This global mindset has paid off, rekindling the flame of Midwest Emo abroad and exemplifying the benefits of seeking inspiration beyond your own borders.
– Braden Allmond


Whispers – Yom-Ma-Lok

Flatspot Records

I personally and bravely believe that the best way to experience hardcore punk music is to see it live. I don’t think anyone has discoursed about this yet, but I’ll give it time. My point is that while I had heard about the release of Yom-Ma-Lok at the buzzer of 2024 (and read a Stereogum comment summarizing it as a “yuletide ass kicking”) nothing could have prepared me for the swaggering way Whispers took the stage at Black Cat a couple months ago. At the first cymbal crash, the whole room was suddenly engulfed in the sound, drenched in their self-described “Bangkok Evilcore,” like when the air gets sucked out right before there’s an explosion. Every molecule of oxygen in the room was reverberating with their metallic sprawl and pounding with crushing blast beats. 

Whispers, a very kickass crew from Thailand, released their latest EP, Yom-Ma-Lok, in December, a relatively long project with features from members of Kickback, Demonstration of Power, and hardcore’s it boys, Speed. There’s a certain magnitude to it, an ascension, as the band oscillates between brawling beatdowns and sweaty anthems. The EP relentlessly pummels the listener, but when I saw it live, the listeners pummeled each other back.

I would also be remiss not to mention that, as of today, my favorite Mancunian lads are back. That’s right, unless the Gallaghers have called it quits between the editing and publishing of this piece, Oasis should be taking the stage in a couple of hours. I’m feelin’ Supersonic mates.
– Caro Alt


racecarbed – bozo

AboutTime Records

In an effort to continually prove myself to be the most esoteric woman at any gathering, I will spend untold time going on musical deep dives online. Call it pretentious, but that’s showbiz, baby! That’s music journalism! That’s my RIGHT! Thus, in the spirit of my deep love for underground music, I would like to bring bozo by racecarbed to everyone’s immediate attention. I may be pretentious, but I’m not a gatekeeper. racecarbed is an artist and producer based in Ireland, creating incredibly delightful music across the pond that has made its way to my ears. If you enjoy hyperpop, noise, emo, digicore, and random sampling, boy, are you in for a treat. If you don’t enjoy any of those things, why are you here? Why are you reading this? Why are you looking at me like that? Go listen to racecarbed anyway! One of my favorite tracks from bozo, “Family Guy Funny Moments” is a painfully honest song, uncomfortably juxtaposed against - you guessed it - a sample of Family Guy. A beautiful and rather heart-wrenching synth melody immediately follows, causing emotional whiplash that is jarring in all the right ways. The shift from Peter Griffin to an evocative riff is, as it turns out, a bit of a shock. While the hyperpop genre often runs the risk of becoming overwhelming and too noisy, racecarbed exercises just enough restraint in his writing to create skillfully balanced digital masterpieces. Anyways, it’s time for you to leave me alone - I’m at the function reading Infinite Jest.
– Britta Joseph


Subsonic Eye – Singapore Dreaming

Topshelf Records

The title for Subsonic Eye’s fifth album, Singapore Dreaming, telegraphs pretty clearly exactly what you’re going to get. Press play on the opening track “Aku Cemas,” and you’re in for 30 minutes of dreamy, overly-saturated rock music straight from Singapore. It’s a consistently pretty album; colorful and well-constructed is the default baseline, even when the band is singing in Malay. By the time the band launches into the riff one track later on “Why Am I Here,” you’re already firmly situated in indie rock heaven. As the purple, yellow, and red from the cover bleed together, everything shifts into focus, then back out. Listening to an album like this feels like eating a good hearty meal; you walk away with every need met.
– Taylor Grimes


Crayon Cats – Songs About You! #2 

Self-released

There is nothing I love more in the world than an earnestly cute jangly pop-punk band, and no one is doing it better than Crayon Cats on Songs About You! #2. The band, who hail from Jakarta, Indonesia, nailed this sound on the first entry of this EP series back in September 2024, but on #2, Crayon Cats have even sharper songs and starker dynamics. The ramshackle pop-punk laments of “October Girlfriend” are juxtaposed with the hazier, dreamier side of indie pop on “Hospital Hopper.” The latter track is competing with “Not The Best Day” from their EP for the title of my favorite Crayon Cats song, in large part because of how brilliantly the band lets the song comedown. After two minutes of exemplifying the fear that builds while accompanying a loved one to the hospital in an emergency, the guitars crack into a vacuum cleaner whir until it all crashes down and ebbs out. In that comedown of fading distortion and reverb, the band captures what it’s like to sit in the hallway waiting for the results. After two sets of Songs About You!, I will continue to listen to any other songs Crayon Cats have to about you.
– Lillian Weber


Mantar – Post Apocalyptic Depression

Metal Blade

When I discovered German metal duo Mantar this year, there were two things I found completely unfathomable: first, that they weren’t an obscure ‘70s occult rock group based on their simple yet fantastic logo, and second, that I hadn’t discovered them until this year. The band feels like they were concocted in a lab just for me, scratching my deep itches of other two-piece sludge metal bands like Big Business or Eagle Twin, albeit with a more direct psychedelic lean. Post Apocalyptic Depression could be the best album title of 2025, if it didn’t feel like our collective depression was more mid-apocalyptic, but it’s at least refreshing that the songs therein are nothing short of badass stoner punk’n’roll, well-suited for fans of other underground European metal acts like Kvelertak or Barren Womb. Lead single and album closer “Cosmic Abortion” (again, these guys really know how to make a great title), its lo-fi, space-trip music video, and chorus lyrics, “KILL, DESTROY, FUCK SHIT UP” made Mantar an instant sell for me, with Post Apocalyptic Depression becoming one of my earliest favorite albums of 2025.
– Logan Archer Mounts


Spirit Desire – Pets

Maraming Records

With a decade of indie emo tunes under their belt, Spirit Desire have little to prove to anyone anymore. Pets is the band’s first release in a few years, a ten-minute offering comprised of three absolutely knockout songs and one instrumental interlude. While the opener, “Dead Pets,” is a great introduction that dives directly into the title at hand, it’s the propulsive “IDFC” that reveals itself as the true standout. The Toronto group offers a complimentary and affirmative palate cleanser with “It Is What It Is,” sending listeners off with some well-wishes until our paths converge again. The whole release is tender, open-hearted, catchy, energetic, and earnest; pound-for-pound, one of the best things I’ve heard all year, with not a second wasted. For as many ideas and riffs and harmonies as Spirit Desire have been able to pack in these ten minutes, I think you’d be hard-pressed to find a better EP in the rock music sphere.
– Taylor Grimes


The Tubs – Cotton Crown 

Trouble In Mind Records

I am once again asking for your listening support of UK’s jangle pop quartet all-stars, The Tubs. I recently saw their show live and in color in Chicago, which has further solidified my aspirations to be treasurer of their soon-to-be-created fan club. Cotton Crown is packed to the brim with energetic, uptempo guitar strokes to circumvent the melancholy, glum lyrics of vocalist Owen Williams. Throughout The Tubs’ sophomore album, Williams’ deep, love-scorned voice is a soothing siren that comforts you while he spills his guts out about lost relationships and the tragic, untimely death of his mother. Each song is a fascinating case study in successfully masking the deeply personal lyrics of Williams, which often venture into darkness with a bright, sunny disposition of music. “Chain Reaction” and “Illusion” surf on nonstop tidal waves of jangle pop guitar strings. Cotton Crown doesn’t have a dull moment in its brief twenty-nine-minute runtime. The Tubs have the energy of an early 2000s Four Loko with the passion of a grief-stricken poet, making this an instant favorite of mine. 
– David Williams

The Faux 8 Diaries

Have you ever seen that video of a guy dancing alone at a music festival? It’s broad daylight in a wide-open field. Some people sit scattered around on blankets, but there he stands, dancing all alone, waving his arms like a wacky waving inflatable arm flailing tube man, grooving out in the truest sense of the word. Eventually, another guy wanders over and starts busting out his funkiest moves, and all of a sudden, this shirtless dude who was standing off by himself is now dancing with someone. Then another person joins in, and three is a crowd. Shortly after that, another couple of people come up, then a group of three. Soon, the mass is growing too fast to count. By the end of the video, people are running towards the crowd, eager to join the actively expanding dance floor. That’s what Fauxchella feels like.

For the uninitiated, Faux (fka Fauxchella) is a DIY/emo/punk music festival in Bowling Green, Ohio, organized by the now-defunct house venue The Summit Shack. While the first two incarnations were hosted at The Shack, all of the following Fauxchellas (plus a few seasonal offshoots) have taken place at Howard’s Club H, a 200-cap dive bar with two stages, $3 PBRs, and $2 shots. Hell yeah. Previous iterations of the fest have included the likes of Origami Angel, Ben Quad, saturdays at your place, Michael Cera Palin, and so many goddamn more. I’m not being hyperbolic at all when I say that it’s basically heaven on earth if you like fast music and guitar tapping. 

If you’re interested in learning more about the history of Fauxchella and The Summit Shack, a couple of years ago, I conducted a long-form interview with Conor Alan, which serves as a retrospective of the festival in all its iterations. There’s also a big recap I did on Fauxchella VI, complete with lots of video footage of different sets.

This June, I made the 12-hour drive up to Bowling Green for Faux 8, because this was one I could not miss. First and foremost, this was set to be the last Fauxchella at Howard’s, given that the fest has long outgrown the confines of the dive bar’s charming sticker-covered walls. Musically, I was excited to catch sets from old faves like Equipment, Summerbruise, and Kerosene Heights. There were also many bands on this year’s lineup I was ecstatic to catch for the first time, like Waving, 95COROLLA, Fend, red sun, and Keep for Cheap. On top of all this, the lineup for day two felt like a miniature sequel to Liberation Weekend, featuring the likes of Pretty Bitter, Ekko Astral, and Home Is Where

Home Is Where

Since I just published a big write-up on Liberation Weekend, I wanted to do something different for Faux and not just go through the lineup band by band. Swim was also tabling the event, slinging shirts, totes, lighters, and cool little zines, so I knew I’d be too busy to realistically catch every set. Instead, I brought my trusty digi cam and tried my best to snap pics of every set and merch spread, plus some cool portraits of band members. Esteemed members of the Swim Team, Josh Ejnes and Ben Parker, were also on-site, so you’ll find their thoughts on each day below, plus some other surprises. 

Thanks to Conor, Ellie, Jake, Mike, Sergei, Trey, Nick, Jacob, and all the people who make it possible to put an event like this together. It truly takes a village, and it’s been an absolute blessing to join in and be a part of it. Faux forever. 


Faux[DACTED]

Before we get any further into this article, we should address the name of the festival. While the previous seven iterations of the fest were named “Fauxchella,” this year’s iteration was unceremoniously re-titled “FAUX 8.” That’s because, back in April, The Summit Shack received a cease and desist from AEG, the second-largest ticketing company in the world, and, notably, the purveyors of the Coachella music festival. Despite the fact that Coachella is the name of a place, despite the fact that the fest is named after a joke from Workaholics, and despite the fact that “Fauxchella” is a 200-person music festival happening halfway across the country at a college town dive bar in Ohio, AEG still felt the need to sic the lawyers on ‘em. 

The Crowd for FinalBossFight!

In the end, Faux 8 played out exactly like any other Fauxchella would, and nothing sizable changed aside from a knowing gap in the posters that were amended to read “FAUX       8” with a big blank spot. A good handful of the bands poked fun at this from the stage between songs, calling attention to how absurd it is that the people running the $600-a-head Influencer Music Festival were getting litigious and using intimidation tactics on a defunct DIY venue. While I’m glad Faux continued unabated, to me, this just feels emblematic of the way that these giant companies will crush, mangle, and intimidate anyone they can if it means a few extra dollars. The fact that they seemed to take so much glee in threatening a zero-profit emo festival, it’s no wonder why live music is in such a bad spot. Fuck you and your $15 beers. 

Alright, that's enough preamble, let's get into it. 


Josh & Ben on Faux 8: Day One

In all honesty, my specific memories of Faux 8 are few and far between. Edibles are partially responsible for this, but a bigger factor is that—at least for me—enjoyment of an event like Faux comes from surrendering to the experience as a whole rather than latching on to any particular moment. When I try to file things away in my brain for later, I often miss other stuff that’s happening right in front of me, so I prefer instead to just let everything wash over me. One benefit of this approach is that when I do remember something distinct, it means a little more; the imprint a result of organic impact rather than personal diligence. 

The thing that stuck with me the most throughout the first day of Faux 8 was how good the sound was; it kind of didn’t make any sense. Over the two days of the festival, more than 40 bands played half-hour sets in rapid succession, a schedule that doesn’t accommodate typical load-ins or soundchecks. On paper, this should be a recipe for frequent technical issues and a poor mix, but everything sounded great. I’m not even grading on a curve here because of the circumstances; the average Faux set sounds better than what you’d expect to hear at your local venue’s regular shows. I think that this high-quality sound production is an underappreciated element of what makes Faux sets so special. Shout out to Jake Pachasa and Mike Seymour, absolute killers on the boards. 

Boyclothes

There are so many bands out there that I mean to listen to but don’t. I’ll see a band come across my feed, I’ll pull up Tidal to check them out, and then bang, the doorbell rings or my dog needs to go to the bathroom. By the time I come back to the computer, I've forgotten what I was doing, and suddenly I’m listening to the Menzingers for the thousandth time. FinalBossFight! were a frequent victim of this pattern for me; they just kept falling through the cracks. Watching their set on day one of Faux, I felt like an absolute fool for not checking them out sooner; they were so good and 100% in my wheelhouse. A few songs in, I was thinking about how their stripped-down approach to pop-punk kind of reminded me of Joyce Manor, a thought that was immediately followed by their killer cover of “Five Beer Plan.” It was very serendipitous. FBF! are now a band that will forever be in my regular listening rotation, thank you Faux for the introduction.

Another day one highlight for me was Bottom Bracket, a Chicago band I’d listened to a few times but had never managed to catch live. Their set was a way more arresting performance than I was expecting. I can't fathom how someone can play guitar like that and sing so well at the same time. Their set was at 7 pm, which is where I found myself starting to feel the fatigue of the day, but they snapped me right out of it. Good bands I enjoy; great bands send a jolt through me, and Bottom Bracket firmly sit in the latter camp—very cool stuff. 

One of the things I was most looking forward to at the fest was Carly Cosgrove’s performance. This was my first time seeing the band since the release of The Cleanest of Houses Are Empty, and I’ve so badly wanted to yell “You, old, dog, you old dog, you, old, dog, you old dog, you, you old dog, you old dog, you!” in a room full of people since first hearing the record. I finally got to do it at Faux, and it was just as magical as I imagined. Tough to beat seeing a band with a no-skip discography live—great way to cap off the night.
– Josh Ejnes

I am foolishly the kind of person who sees the opportunity to spend a total of 24 hours inside a small dive bar in Ohio and thinks, “How can I spend as much of my time as possible there without leaving?” On day one, I am proud to say I left only once, and that was during the much-earned hour-long break built into the schedule. Even then, I only went next door to a little deli for a chicken sandwich and some waffle fries that were better than they needed to be.  

The real reason I wanted to spend so much time at Faux was not just because of the incredible line-up of bands and absurdly cheap drink prices, but because Faux 8, much like all years prior, is really built on such a small and niche community that unites yearly to dance and drink $3 beers together. Nothing from the day stands out more to me than going around and seeing people from the internet who I have been aware of for a long time and was finally able to meet. 

There is also something really special about attending a festival and being able to get in a moshpit with the same people that you paid money to see. The band members are all running around and taking time to see the sets. It is very rare anymore that you go to a major show and get to actually talk to the folks who are the show. It is one of the things that makes Faux feel like a giant DIY family reunion. 

Bee’s Faux Bucket Hat

There are two bands that I want to take time to talk about, and the first is Later Gator. The Indianapolis emo outfit delivered an incredible side-stage set, despite being in a challenging position, immediately following Topiary Creatures and preceding Bottom Bracket. I was at the first-ever Later Gator show, and to have seen them grow from what they were to a band that can fill the room for a Faux set is incredible. Guitarist Jonathan Bayless and his ability to wield both a guitar and trumpet at the same time is nothing short of wizardry. There were two different covers that the band performed: one was “Higher” by Creed, and the other was a spontaneous, improvised cover of “We Are Young” by fun. that materialized after Bayless broke a string. This band kept the room moving, and it was incredible to see. 

The other band I need to mention is Strelitzia, the Arizona-based math rock group who put on what had to be one of the most special performances of the entire Faux weekend. The band rarely gets out of their home state, let alone all the way to the Midwest, so getting to see them come out and play songs off their 2024 album Winter was nothing short of astounding. I sat there at the front, thrashing around and sobbing the entire set. All I can truly say is if you have the opportunity to see this band, take it, because they are better than anybody could ever tell you.
– Ben Parker


Merch Mayhem

Ever since my first Fauxchella six years ago, I’ve viewed merch as an essential part of this festival’s identity. Bands travel from all over for this fest, many already on tours routed to or from Bowling Green just for Faux. This means that almost every band has merch with them, and at this scale, you’ll never know what you’re gonna get. Free stickers? You bet your ass. Hooters logo rips? Sure, why not. Crocheted alligators? Obviously

Tucked in the back corner of Howard’s main room, spread across two pool tables and half a dozen other surfaces, you will find a packed corner of all the best emo finery you could want. Most bands had shirts and stickers, some of which were custom-made just for this fest. Others offered vinyl records, CDs, tapes, lighters, tapestries, friendship bracelets, and toothbrushes. Several of the bands provided free earplugs, Narcan, drug test kits, Plan B, leftist literature, and wallet-sized cards about how to talk to ICE, as well as other harm-reduction supplies. It was impressive to see all these merch spreads and the infinite ways that artists create beyond the music you hear on the record. Here is a gallery of merch spreads, all photos taken with permission from the bands.
– Taylor Grimes


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> SOME ONE HAS HACKED INTO OUR SYSTEM...
> RECEIVING TRANSMISSION...

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Caro’s Warped Tour Report: Day One

Hi Taylor, Josh, and Ben! It’s Caro, and I am on the ground and reporting not-live from that national embarrassment happening in D.C. You know, the first stop of the 30th Anniversary of the Vans Warped Tour. 

The first thing I did was follow a guy smoking a cigarette and wearing a Memphis May Fire hoodie because I thought he would know where the gates were. He didn’t. But, thanks to my bloodhound navigational skills and a giant sign that said “ENTRANCE HERE,” I found the doors. When I approached the security check, they were blasting “Can We Just Get High?” by Carpool. Honestly, I thought I was imagining it for a second, like a desert mirage, heat psychosis already setting in, but it was real and it rocked. It was finally time to take my first steps into the very big parking lot where this was all going down and start paying $18 per tall boy White Claw all weekend. 

The day started with D.C.’s own Origami Angel performing in the first hour slot on one of the main stages to a giant crowd. They played a fuck-this-shit-up version of “Dirty Mirror Selfie” and a “Love Sosa”-infused “Doctor Whomst”. I want to make it clear that people went off for our hometown heroes.

Photo by @realkayls

Publicly, I wrote an article last year about the ascent of saturdays at your place as one of the pillars of contemporary emo — you should read it — so I felt pretty clever when they were announced for Warped Tour. Privately, I’ve had a list on my phone for the past few years called “bands that deserve to have Warped Tour re-invented so they can play in a parking lot at 2 pm,” and saturdays has been on that list since 2023. Hang my byline in the rafters because guess where I was standing at 2:35 pm. Also, why did the founder of Emo Nite walk by me?

saturdays were playing on one of the smaller stages, not the one sponsored by Ghost Energy, not the one sponsored by Beatbox, not the one sponsored by Vans, and not the other one sponsored by Vans. This corner of the festival hosted smaller artists with looser genre affiliations (think local bands like Angel Du$t or legends like Fishbone) and rowdier crowds. In this slice of paradise, saturdays kept the audience locked in through fast jams like their Blink-182-ish “pourover” and the more anthemic songs like “it’s always cloudy in kalamazoo.” The founder of Emo Nite walked by me again. When the band launched into their Certified Emo Classic, “tarot cards,” the crowd reacted accordingly, launching crowdsurfers towards the stage

After saturdays, I walked over to the Vans Left Foot Stage to scope out the crowd and watch Chiodos. Taylor, Josh, and Ben, I am here to say that there were fewer Elder Emo shirts than you would think. I’m assuming that you picture everyone here wearing something like that, but honestly, of the annoying apparel, it’s pretty evenly divided between Elder Emo shirts, Make America Emo Again hats, and It Was Never a Phase patches, but overall, it just wasn’t a lot of people. Everyone else was wearing band shirts or getting a sunburn in tank tops. Also, Chiodos ruled.

Historically, the Vans Warped compilation CD has never cost more than $5, and Smartpunk collaborated with the festival to keep this tradition alive. They also worked with Warped to do a series of less-formal sets under a tent in the middle of an alley of vendors. On Saturday, they showcased local bands like American Television and The Dreaded Laramie, as well as the cannonball-ish local band Combat. Many reading this may remember Combat’s bombastic Faux performance last year, so imagine that, but at literal Warped Tour. They rocked the fuck out, took requests from audience members like Ryland Heagy and Esden Stafne, and started a thrashing moshpit with passerbys from the Sublime and Cartel crowds. 

Photo by Combat

I want to end with this begrudging Day 1 thought: I know it’s easy to be dismissive of the Warped Tour revival. Like I know the jokes write themselves and it’s easy to pick apart, but believe me, your field reporter, the crowd was consistently fucking hyped. For the most part, everyone here paid a lot of money to hear good ass music and good ass music is what they found. Minus Ice Nine Kills.
– Caro Alt


Josh & Ben on Faux 8: Day Two

Trading card trading floor

Went into day two of Faux more tired than I would have liked. I bought a Deal or No Deal DVD game for the trip, sort of as a gag, but my friends and I actually ended up getting quite addicted to it, and our sleep suffered as a result; despite this, I was able to power through and watch some great sets. An earlier-in-the-day favorite of mine was Palette Knife, a late addition to the fest, who had the side stage absolutely rocking. Felt similarly about them as I did Bottom Bracket: how can you play like that and sing like that simultaneously? Doesn’t feel like it should be possible. “Jelly Boi” is one of my favorite emo songs, and I loved hearing it live. Definitely going to be catching Palette Knife next time they’re in Chicago. 

Pretty Bitter’s set at Faux 7 was one of the best of the weekend, so I was super stoked to see that they were on the lineup again for Faux 8. I felt like last year the band didn’t fully get the hype they deserved (partially due to a tough mid day timeslot), so I was really happy to see so many people dancing and singing along as they played this year; it seems like they’re a band whose fanbase is growing exponentially, which I couldn’t be happier to see. Through their set, the band’s new stuff mixed in seamlessly with the old, culminating with an all-out performance of the incredibly hooky “The Damn Thing is Cursed,” which brought the house down. Everyone in Pretty Bitter is a great performer, but at Faux 8, I found myself particularly drawn to their drummer, who was smashing those things and doing all sorts of stick spins and tricks—rockstar stuff, love to see it. 

Pretty Bitter, Pretty much killin’ it

This brings us to my favorite set of the festival: Fend. I don’t think I’d even heard of Fend heading into Faux, and in all honesty, I had intended to skip their set to catch some fresh air before Summerbruise played. As I started to walk by the side stage, the band’s sound pulled me in like a tractor beam; they were unlike anyone else at Faux. I’ve been listening to their record, Disc, pretty much continuously since I got home, I just can’t get over their vocal melodies. Honestly, I wish I had more specific things to say here, but their set put me into a stupor of sorts; my reaction was visceral in a way I struggle to describe. I guess it was kind of like the first time I had Nerds Gummy Clusters and my brain was firing off in ways it hadn’t in years, the result of elements I’m familiar with being put together in a combination I can’t effectively deconstruct. They just sounded awesome. Listen to this band. 

The last day two act that I want to shout out is Leisure Hour, who closed things out on the festival’s side stage. It feels like Leisure Hour have been touring nonstop lately, and their reps on the road are paying off. The band was already great when I first saw them in Chicago last October, but since then, it seems they’ve leveled up even further. The crowd reaction during their closer “jenny” is probably the most hype I saw people get all night, they absolutely owned the space.
– Josh Ejnes

Smash is still a Faux tradition

Much like my peers, I went into day two with little to no sleep. I also overheated on the way in because my friend and I chose to walk the 20 minutes to Faux from the hotel. This was also one of the few times during any fest that I was willing to miss any of the sets, as I was down the road from Howard’s with many Faux attendees for the No King’s Day protest. It was powerful to be there with friends and band members as we all chanted and felt the spirit of protest. It was beautiful, as many Bowling Green locals were out and the streets were lined. I am certain that, of all the things that happened during the weekend, this had to be the most important.

Upon arriving at the festival, I chose to spend my day wandering around and taking time to meet people while passively viewing most of the sets. You kind of hit this realization that you are surrounded by people you won’t see for at least a year, and all you want to do is bask in that community. I took the time to meet the people I was terrified of, such as Mel Bleker from Pretty Bitter, with whom I have developed a friendship over the years on Twitter due to the nature of us both being poets. It led to a beautiful and surreal moment where we were both able to complement each other’s writing and connect as humans. I also got to go with my friend, who had never seen Summerbruise, over to their merch table and talk to Mike, who called me the “Michael Jordan of attending Summerbruise shows.” Being in moshpits and always having a group conversation to walk into is exactly what Faux is about. 

Keep for Cheap

There were many sets from Day Two that I loved, and the first I wanted to touch on is Echo. This is a fascinating band as it is essentially just Summebruise flipped around with the drummer, Stanli, taking over vocals and leading the band. They began with a magical cover of “Shooting Stars” by B.o.B. This stood out to me because I had spent the time walking into the fest joking about the concept of a band playing this song on Twitter. The rest of the set was filled with some fun-filled, ass-throwing emo music that had the kids moving early in the morning, as it was many of the protest group’s first set. 

Another one of the sets I wanted to highlight is Tiny Voices. This set was always going to be different as their vocalist was unable to make the fest, and Luke Ferkovich (Kule, Endswell) was filling in on the mic. The crowd for this set was absolutely raucous and filled the main stage room. I was right at the front, and early on, I got forced onto the stage from the crowd pushing forward, and not once was I able to get off. It is a testament to this band that even without their vocalist, they were able to put on one hell of a show. Half of the vocals were provided by the crowd, as a beautiful cacophony of mic grabs took place repeatedly throughout the entire set. At one point, Luke even went into the crowd and got the whole room moving. It was the kind of set that jumpstarts a band’s momentum, à la Combat at Faux 7.

Jesus was in attendance

The pinnacle of the day for me was getting to see Summerbruise for the 12th time. They are a truly special Indiana band and one of the few things I feel pride for in my home state. This was a strong four-piece Summerbruise lineup, which couldn’t be a full-band set as Mitch Gulish was at Warped Tour playing with saturdays at your place. Summerbruise played all of the hits, and the first moment that stuck out was during “Dead Daddog 20/20” when the entire crowd overpowered vocalist Mike Newman, who broke down into tears on stage. It was a beautiful moment that was well-deserved by a band that has been a mainstay in the Faux lineup over the years. Outside of Equipment, Summerbruise is the Faux band. This group inspires community and supports each other in a way that not many others do. 

Summerbruise was also able to debut their recently released track “Never Bothered,” which really took off at the bridge as around six different band members rushed on stage to grab the mic for backup vocals through the end of the song. The set concluded as many Summerbruise sets do, with Mike introducing “Bury Me at Penn Station” as a song for the community and the people who make these shows worth it (despite it being about his wife). However, this performance was a little different, as Frederick Loeb of Dear Maryanne came onto stage to play guitar, allowing Mike to spend the end of the set in the crowd, connecting with people in a way he usually can’t due to his dual role as a guitarist and singer. Beautiful set from a fantastic band.
– Ben Parker

Summerbruise


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Caro’s Warped Tour Report: Day 2

Hi Taylor, Josh, and Ben! I respawned in Parking Lot 6 and am once again live from the Bam Margera Look-Alike Convention. The Hot Topic Conference on Reviving Wallet Chains. The Consortium of People Who Loved Illegally Drinking the Original Four Loko. Vans Warped Tour Day 2. And I am here to see motherfucking Carpool. This bit was sponsored by Ghost Energy. #DRINKGHOST

Warped Tour has an infamous no crowdsurfing rule. Obviously, it’s a joke rule that was historically ignored, but that didn’t stop Kevin Lyman and Co. from putting up the old “you mosh, you crowd surf, you get hurt, we get sued, no more Warped Tour" signs. What they didn’t have a sign against was bands jumping into the crowd. Enter Carpool.

Carpool - Photo by Alec Pugliese

Carpool ripped through heaters like “Come Thru Cool,” “I Hate Music,” and “Thom Yorke New City” (thank you again for playing that), but everything came to a boiling point for “The Salty Song” when Stoph Colasanto jumped the barricade to join the crowd, turning the pit into a party. It has long been the belief of this site that Carpool fucking rocks, but this was the pinnacle so far. The only way for Rochester’s rowdiest crew to go is up. (And if you haven’t checked out Pretty Rude’s new album — fix that.)

Now, Taylor, Josh, and Ben, I don’t think anyone I’ve ever bought old band merch off of has ever performed on a festival main stage, but then Eric Egan walked onto the Ghost stage, so I guess I can cross that one off. I know a lot of y’all have watched Heart Attack Man’s rise and might have even caught them at Faux last year, but did you know they also played in 2018 pre-Fake Blood? It’s all pretty cool and even cooler to see a lot of people came to Warped explicitly for Heart Attack Man. 

God bless the state of Oklahoma. That’s all I can think when Cliffdiver starts up. I’ve seen them a lot over the years, but every time I catch them, I can’t help but get completely lost in their positivity and zest for life, despite it all. Like a couple of bands this weekend, Cliffdiver discussed how monumental it felt to be performing at Warped, and it genuinely did feel like an event. After all, how could you not feel important and joyous when Cliffdiver is playing “goin’ for the garbage plate”?

Cliffdiver - Photo by Caitlyn McGonigal

Between Bri Wright’s stage banter and Joey Duffy’s FUCK ICE shirt, Cliffdiver spent a lot of time addressing the political state of things. If you missed the news, Trump held a military parade for his birthday in the city, flooding D.C. with violent dipshits and that tension made its way over to the Festival Grounds of RFK Stadium. All weekend, artists addressed the state of everything: The Wonder Years spoke about trans youth, ICE, and Palestine while Dan Campbell wore a FREE GAZA shirt, Big Ass Truck gave a speech about what they hate, Meredith Hurley from Millionaires wore a Protect Trans Folks shirt, and Buddy Nielsen from Senses Fail addressed the history of sexual assault this festival festered and used his time to advocate for Palestine. This doesn’t even include all the other artists, such as Origami Angel, Scene Queen, Pennywise, Motion City Soundtrack, The Suicide Machines, Red Jumpsuit Apparatus, Magnolia Park, Combat, sace6, and Fever333, and MORE who also dedicated time in their sets to using their voices to advocate for change. This also isn’t even including all of the political conversation happening in the crowds, which largely expressed similar sentiments to these bands and responded with support. 

The MVPs of the whole weekend are easily Leisure Hour, who played Fauxchella Saturday night and dipped down to D.C. to play the Smartpunk tent on Sunday evening. Not to mention that their load-in at Warped Tour was literally through the crowd since they weren’t playing a formal stage. Rock and fucking roll. And I concur with Josh, go listen to “jenny.”

Rain had threatened the entire weekend, and the storm was finally unleashed as Kerosene Heights was taking the stage after their drive from Bowling Green. That didn’t stop anyone from partying; in fact, it got everyone even more excited. I was stopped several times through the set by people passing by to ask who they were, all to which I replied, yelling, “KEROSENE HEIGHTS FROM ASHEVILLE.” It was just so fun. It’s kind of what this is all about, you know?

Kerosene Heights - Photo by Alec Pugliese

My final thoughts? I think there’s a temptation to get into an us (very cool music listeners) vs them (nostalgia-obsessed poser) mentality. Because yes, the whole Elder Emo thing is grating, but this was also the first music thing I’ve been to where someone was wearing a Pg. 99 shirt — which is objectively some of the most authentically Elder Emo you can get. My point is that on the ground, it didn’t matter; we were all already there, so there was nothing left to do but have fun. I’m immensely proud of all the new bands that got spots to play the festival and I would be lying if I said I didn’t love seeing the old shit too. I literally almost waited in line to meet Levi Benton from Miss May I.
– Caro Alt


Taylor’s Portraits

Grabbing portraits of bands was something I wanted to do at Liberation Weekend, but I never quite worked up the courage to commit to fully. Because I knew the bands and the space better at Faux, I was much less shy about asking band members for a quick picture whenever the opportunity presented itself. Most of the time, I was operating on a simple “one and done” philosophy, snapping one pic and saying “cute” or “sick” and thanking the band. I’m incredibly proud of how some of these came out, and I hope I can continue to take many more pictures of band members in this capacity.

If you haven’t seen it, we've just launched a Photography wing of this website, featuring photo recaps of concerts. I plan on doing a Faux 8 photo recap at a later date, so more of these to come.


Faux 8: Honorary Day 3

While Faux 8 was only a two-day fest, a daytime Sunday show at The Swarmyard, a local BG DIY institution, acted as an unofficial continuation of the festivities. The lineup consisted of Decatur, Illinois folk rocker Marble Teeth (who we profiled earlier this year) and Equipment. When I showed up at The Swarmyard a little before doors, a group was forming across the street already a few dozen strong. By the time they started letting people in, it was clear the basement would not fit everyone comfortably or safely. Instead, everyone poured back out into the street and assembled at the front of the house for two front porch acoustic sets. 

Marble Teeth beguiled with his talky acousti-folk setup, playing guitar, harmonica, and CRT TV. At the beginning of each track, Caleb Jefson would select a song off a custom-made DVD menu, which would provide the beat as he sang and played guitar. He wove through songs off his early LPs Cars and Park, 2023’s top 10 times i’ve cried, as well as some new material that Jefson teased as part of an EP coming out on July 4th. 

Marble Teeth

After Marble Teeth’s set, Nick Zander took the mantle of the front porch for an all-request Equipment set. Occasionally joined by Penny and Ellie, the group rocked through a one-of-a-kind three-hour set, playing everything from embarrassing cuts off their 2015 demo to the then-just-a-few-days-old “espresso lemonade.” It was a staggering thing to take in deep cuts from every era of this band as Zander shredded and sang with Springsteen-like endurance. The crowd sang along whenever words were forgotten, and Zander was more than happy to provide the crowd with fun backstory and lore about nearly every track. 

The afternoon set was a beautiful and unique experience that will sadly act as the last from the Swarmyard, as the venue was forced to shut down following this show. Much like the AEG C&D, this feels like an overreaction and overreach; the last drops of life being squeezed out of a passionate group of people putting on shows purely out of love. That said, if I know anything about Jacob and Beautiful Rat Records, it’s that this energy will not go away, merely be diverted to other projects. Plus, if there’s any way to close up your house venue, it’s hard to beat a massive, mega four-hour show headlined by hometown heroes like Equipment.
– Taylor Grimes

Equipment


Some Closing Thoughts

Six years ago, I attended my first Fauxchella because a few bands I liked were performing. I figured it was worth the 90-minute drive down from Detroit to see Origami Angel, Stars Hollow, and Charmer. It turns out that “worth it” doesn’t even begin to capture the experience. I came away from Fauxchella III more inspired and enthused about music than I’d ever been in my life. As I sat eating Rally’s on the hood of my car after the gig, I found myself in absolute awe at the type of communal experience that was possible outside the confines of a traditional music festival experience. To me, this realization goes part and parcel with my Pacific Northwestern ass experiencing authentic Midwest DIY culture for the first time, amazed that people could throw shows out of their living room or basement, not to mention the ability to support and interact with bands directly, as opposed to strictly over a merch table (if at all). 

After attending Fauxchella III, I came back to Bowling Green for DIY Prom, then (on two separate occasions) made a 12-hour drive up from North Carolina just for Fauxchella. It wasn’t lost on me how silly it was to travel so far and take time off work for a festival happening in a college town outside of Toledo, but the lineups were too specific and too tailored to my tastes. It was like someone took my last.fm charts and turned them into a festival lineup. How could I miss that?

This year at Faux 8, I spoke with a couple who had traveled up from Mexico specifically for this festival. I was pretty amazed and said, “You guys probably traveled further than anyone here.” These were words I wound up eating mere hours later when I was talking to another group who had traveled from Alaska for Faux 8. 

On the second day of the festival, I found myself out back chatting with members of Keep For Cheap and Fend when Autumn Vagle said, “Minnesota needs something like this,” referring to Fauxchella’s tight-knit sense of community and impressive artistic draw. Similarly, at one point in the night, I was catching up with Jael Holzman, frontwoman of Ekko Astral and one of the people who spearheaded Liberation Weekend. She cited Fauxchella directly as an inspiration for how a festival like this can and should run, saying that watching Faux over the years was proof of concept that they could do something similar in DC. The result of that inspiration was an incredible festival that raised nearly $40k for the trans rights advocacy collective Gender Liberation Movement. That’s inspiration in action.

With next year’s venue still an unknown, any future Faux will look undeniably different. There will be no more Fauxchella as we’ve known it, but hopefully, there will be Fauxchellas sprouting up everywhere as people take this energy and inspiration back to their home scenes. Fauxchella itself isn’t special. It’s not the venue, the lineup, or even the people running it; what makes Fauxchella special is the community. It’s all these people coming together for two days of music and friendship and $3 beers. What makes Fauxchella special is you.

It feels poetic that Conor Alan, the person organizing most everything related to Fauxchella and the Summit Shack, had a baby on the literal day before Faux 8. As Conor steps into the role of father, it feels as if his other baby is now finally old enough to go off and live on its own. The format of this festival is something that can (and should) be replicated in every music scene across the country. And hey, maybe the first version is just a bunch of local bands and comedians performing in a garage, but keep at it, and who knows how big it could become? Who knows how many people will travel from other states and countries to be a part of your scene? What I do know is that you won’t find out until you start.

Fauxchella, as it has existed for the last near-decade, is gone, but in its place will come another Fauxchella in a different place run by the same people. Then another Faux-like festival with a different name, run by a completely different group of people. Then maybe even one in your hometown. Faux is more than just a music festival; it’s an idea, and ideas can be replicated, shared, and built upon. This is yours now. 

Fauxchella Forever ∞