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CIVIC | ENUMCLAW

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Photo von CIVIC | ENUMCLAW

Wann

Sonntag
21.05.2023
Beginn: 20:00
Einlass: 19:00

Wo

Cassiopeia
Revaler Str. 99
10245 Berlin
Deutschland
Watch onYoutube Event onFacebook

Die beiden Shows von CIVIC und ENUMCLAW werden zu einer Double-Headline Show zusammengelegt. Die Show findet nun im Cassiopeia am geplanten Tag statt.

CIVIC – an origin story since time immemorial, the five-piece came together in 2018 through the traps of the Melbourne music scene. Bonding over a shared love of tightly coiled riffs and a collective musical ethos, they channeled this into their first EP New Vietnam. In a head rush recording session, the 7 tracks were slammed out in a single day, with the underground hit going on to sell out of several pressings worldwide. Making a name for themselves through the intensity of their live shows, their  New Vietnam launch would become one of those folklore moments within Melbourne.

Taking to the stage with a contoured cheek and darkened eyes, McCullough’s glamoured stage presence beamed and boomed over the sold-out crowd. Cutting through the scene with cult-like vigor, their garnered momentum would lead them to a string of sold-out 7 inches, a European tour, a spot on the beloved Golden Plains Festival, a newfound home on the revered Flightless Records, and a fan in punk icon Henry Rollins, “I am digging that band… not one bad track in their recorded catalog”.

With momentum in the tank, they took to various locations across Victoria to get the beds of Future Forecast down. From Richmond’s historic Bakehouse Studios in all its grandeur to DIY run storage shed on High St, there’s a consideration for the new and old on this album. Paying homage to the classics, but pivoting on them with an avant-charged edge. It’s raw, searing guitars; pummeling rhythms; driving bass; with vocals that lock into and synergise with their wall of sound. Balanced by the raucous and restrained weaving of melodies and textures, the imbued sense of nostalgia, and the vocal variation which broadens their sound past any one genre label. There’s the horn fuelled drive of album opener ‘Radiant Eye’, the power-pop ladden hook of “As Seen On Tv”, the emotively atmospheric and vocally subdued “Sunday Best”, culminating with closer “Come To Know”, before ending in a tightly wound splay of feedback and groove.

Not since Sub Pop Records put out Girl Trouble’s Hit It or Quit It almost 35 years ago has there been such widespread and unequivocal support for a band from Tacoma. Enter from stage left: Enumclaw, whose early singles “Fast N All” and “Free Drop Billy” conjured a swirl of breathless praise from fans and choice publications like Pitchfork and The Fader before striking a single note in front of a live crowd.

Johnson describes Tacoma as a cloud hanging over the band, but not necessarily in a negative way. It’s more like an inescapable component of the band’s identity. “I honestly thought I was going to move to New York last April,” he says. “I was gonna take a break from doing music stuff, to live in a big city and try becoming a photographer. But the band [and its growing profile] ended up keeping me here in Tacoma.”

Enumclaw formed in 2019 and played their first gig during the thick of the COVID-19 pandemic, in the gorgeous Lincoln District backyard of a vintage shop/community space that is now rumored to be an Airbnb. (Sadly appropriate for a largely working class town overrun with young professionals priced out of the town’s exorbitantly expensive sibling city, Seattle.) Their sound was lovably shambolic, a loosey-goosey strain of indie rock begging to be snuck onto “RIYL: Pavement” playlists even though the band cites Drake as a formative influence.

Since then, they have become veritable road warriors, and criss-crossing the continental United States has tightened them up considerably. After playing shows for barely a year, they’re already ready for the big rooms.

Save the Baby, Enumclaw’s massive-sounding debut full-length, is a swing for greatness; a collection of simple but life-affirming and deeply personal songs about the importance of chasing after your dreams. Aramis Johnson sings of growing up without a father and having to watch his mom sleep on a couch , so of course his ambition as an artist is to be in one of the biggest bands in the world. “The best band since Oasis,” as their earliest motto goes. There’s some working class elbow grease running through the gears of these skyward, populist indie rock tunes (garnished with just enough weird).

Produced by Gabe Wax and recorded at ALMA in Tacoma (a multipurpose space including performance stages and a studio), Johnson, guitarist Nathan Cornell, bassist Eli Edwards, and drummer Ladaniel Gipson play with dynamics while taking their songwriting to the stratosphere. The opening title track is divided by a valley of murky haze, sending the uptempo rock of its first movement into the lighters-up moment of its closing section, all thunder and heft. Johnson exclaims his satisfaction with the take before the recording abruptly cuts off, the first in a series of earnest insights into the joy of getting to achieve his ambitions. New wave synths color “Paranoid,” “Somewhere” is augmented by dreamy, ambient effects.

Johnson’s personal experiences heavily color Save the Baby, titled as such because he’s basically preserving the dreams he’s had since he was a young child to make a mark on the world. It’s an album, in spite of romantic relationships going sour and the pressure that comes with being a young Black man who grew up with a fair share of hardships, about the importance of following your dreams. On “Park Lodge,” Johnson sings about watching his mother sleep on a couch and the survivor’s remorse of a friend’s mental health deteriorating as his own rock music stardom is on the ascent. “It’s about the feeling of being stuck in Tacoma,” Johnson says. Just like a lot of people in the Black community feel like they have to make it out through sports or rapping, I have to make it out with the band. I feel like this is mine and the band’s only option to do something in a real way with our lives.”

Johnson’s father passed away from sickle cell anemia when he was just 10-years-old, his mother walked for miles to a job at Subway, and his family subsisted on food provided by EBT cards. His best friend when he was younger was diagnosed with schizophrenia. (“I feel like if I were the one who had gotten sick, he would have handled it better than I did,” Johnson says, the aforementioned survivor’s guilt heavy in his voice. Wouldn’t you aspire to be in one of the world’s biggest bands if those things happened to you?

On “10th and J,” a striking, pulsating rock song tinged with melancholy, Johnson sings of destiny, something he believes in greatly. Save the Baby is an album about stepping into your purpose, about the determination it takes to not give up on yourself. “It really felt like it was my last shot to make it out of here, from a mental perspective, from a career perspective,” Johnson says. As Johnson plays the chords of “Apartment” on acoustic guitar, he sings, “Hey! You’ve got one last chance! / Why not give it all that you can?” It’s essentially a letter to himself, reminding himself to put his all into pursuing the rock star dream. For himself, for his loved ones, for all the people he’s known who never made it out of the cycle of trauma.

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