NYC's BODEGA share brand new single "Myrtle Parade" & share final part of CC tetralogy, "Cultural Consumer IV"

BODEGA SHARE NEW SINGLE "MYRTLE PARADE"

LISTEN / WATCH 
HERE

DELUXE EDITION OF "OUR BRAND COULD BE YR LIFE" OUT NOVEMBER 1ST ON 
CHRYSALIS RECORDS


UK HEADLINE TOUR STARTS THIS MONTH

Selected praise for April's "Our Brand Could Be Yr Life":

"Vital reworkings, which take in some of their most varied sounds to date... BODEGA's collective finger remains on the pulse." **** DIY

“Listening to Our Brand Could Be Yr Life, I keep being drawn to that mystical sweet spot where accessibility and dissonance meet. Just a step to either side and you’ve missed it but get a bullseye and the results are sublime. BODEGA know that place well.” 8/10 The Line Of Best Fit

"A culturally conscious opus, equally dripping with classic 90s alt.US indie ambition. Well worth seeking out. A cracker." 8/10 Classic Rock

"NYC indie-rock trailblazers... endlessly inventive." DORK

“Melodic and infectious indie-rock with hooks galore.” Uncut

“Wit and indie-rock attack, melding the machine-tooled precision of early Strokes, the ragged tunefulness of Guided By Voices and the acid bite of The Van Pelt... consistently serves up gems.” Mojo

"An entertaining, intellectual and heartfelt riposte to the broken systems that have engulfed our culture." CLASH

Coolest Things This Week - GQ

NYC's cultural commentators BODEGA have today shared a brand new single, "Myrtle Parade", the latest track to be released from Brand On The Run, a digital deluxe edition of their acclaimed 2024 album, Our Brand Could Be Yr Life, due out November 1st via Chrysalis Records. It's also paired to a vibrant self-directed video from the band.

LISTEN / WATCH "MYRTLE PARADE" HERE

The expanded edition features seven additional tracks, four of those previously unreleased including "Myrtle Parade", and further B-sides, with one of those, "Cultural Consumer IV", also shared today.

"Cultural Consumer IV" is the final part in the Cultural Consumer tetralogy and a follow-up to "Cultural Consumer III" that was A-listed at BBC 6 Music earlier this year.

The band's Ben Hozie had the following to say about their new single "Myrtle Parade" and the themes for its video:

"‘Myrtle Parade’ was a song I originally wrote for an earlier version of ‘Endless Scroll’ but it was far too sunny and breezy to fit with the minimalism of that album. It’s a song set in a smoky DIY warehouse venue (Brookyln’s defunct and much missed Aviv) about feeling out of place and going through the motions at a show where the atmosphere is cramped and the social anxiety is high. The verse lyrics feature impressionistic snippets of overheard conversation at the venue where I imagined gossip about Myrtle, a fictional scenester emblematic of the BK rock world I associate with the Myrtle Wyckoff and Myrtle Broadway subway stops.

Me, Nikki, and Bodega Bay member Joe Wakeman (with assistance from Bruno Jansen, Sergei Krishkov, and Preston Spurlock) made the music video to reflect the paradox of the song; It’s a euphoric feel-good affair set at a costumed gallery party where bad vibes feel just around the corner. Paranoid roleplaying was intertwined with genuine ecstasy in my often-awkward coming of age at the Myrtle Parade. Janelle Krone plays the role of ‘Myrtle’."

WATCH / LISTEN TO "MYRTLE PARADE" HERE

LISTEN TO "CULTURAL CONSUMER IV"
HERE

Brand On The Run is a collection of tracks that compliment Our Brand Could Be Yr Life. Like Our Brand, these songs are ‘remakes’ of songs from Ben and Nikki’s primordial group, Bodega Bay (2013-2016). Three of the tracks were B-sides to that album’s singles; “Adaptation of the Truth about Marie” pairs w/ “Tarkovski,” ”N.A.S.S.” (New Age Spineless Sophists) pairs w/ “City is Taken,” and today's “Cultural Consumer IV” pairs w/ “Cultural Consumer III.” 

Hozie continues, “Like ‘Our Brand’, this collection explores the existential crisis that comes with a life devoted to underground rock music. To complement our dissection of underground rock mythos, we explore various genres such as Madchester (“Myrtle Parade”), shoegaze (“Music Hall of Williamsburg”), jangle pop (“Adaptation Of The Truth About Marie”), no wave (“N.A.S.S.”), post-punk (‘Listen w/ yr eyes’), and glam (“Cultural Consumer IV”).”

The band recently launched their own ATM: BODEGA AT THIS MOMENT podcast on DSP’s, and you can listen HERE

Our Brand Could Be Yr Life was released this past April to critical acclaim and three singles A-listed at BBC 6 Music. BODEGA previewing the record at seven unofficial SXSW parties, before touring the eastern half of North America, along with select EU and UK dates, including Wide Awake Festival, in London.

The band return to the UK for further headline dates in the UK later this month. 

A full set of dates are below:

October 2024

10/15 – Nottingham, UK @ Rescue Rooms
10/16 – Leeds, UK @ Brudenell Social Club [SOLD OUT]
10/17 – Glasgow, UK @ Room 2
10/18 – Newcastle, UK @ The Cluny [SOLD OUT]
10/19 – Birmingham, UK @ Future Days at The Crossing
10/21 – Cambridge, UK @ Junction 2
10/22 – Sheffield, UK @ Crookes Social Club [SOLD OUT]
10/23 – Bristol, UK @ The Lantern [SOLD OUT]
10/24 – London, UK @ EartH Hall
10/25 - St Davids, UK @ Boia Festival

BODEGA
BRAND ON THE RUN
OUT NOVEMBER 1ST ON CHRYSALIS

TRACKLISTING:

Side A

Our Brand Could Be Yr Life 

01. Dedicated To The Dedicated
02. G.N.D. Deity
03. Bodega Bait
04. Tarkovski
05. Major Amberson
06. Stain Gaze
07. Webster Hall
08. ATM
09. Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Drum
10. Protean
11. Born Into By What Consumes
12. Cultural Consumer I
13. Cultural Consumer II
14. Cultural Consumer III
15. City Is Taken


Side B

01. Myrtle Parade
02. Cry When Yr Young
03. Music Hall of Williamsburg
04. Listen w/ Yr Eyes
05. Adaptation of the Truth about Marie
06. Cultural Consumer IV
07. N.A.S.S.

More info:

Sometimes you have to move backwards to move forwards. Just ask punk cultural commentators BODEGA, whose new album sees them carve a new future from fuzz-soaked, consumerism-skewering shards of their past. “It’s something we’ve been wanting to do for years,” guitarist and vocalist Ben Hozie explains of Our Brand Could Be Yr Life – a collection of catchy indie-rock ruminations on the slow-creep of corporate-think into youth culture, first written eight years ago. Then known as BODEGA BAY, the Brooklyn group recorded those songs as a paradoxical double album. “It was super meticulous but aggressively lo-fi at the same time,” Hozie laughs, recalling thirty three tracks they “treated like a lush Brian Wilson epic but recorded through a scrappy MacBook mic.” Pretty much no one heard the ensuing self-released album outside of Bushwick, he insists. But for Hozie and vocalist Nikki Belfiglio – BODEGA’s other driving force – it retained a special place in their hearts, as more than just music. “It was a statement,” the guitarist beams. “Where the philosophy we loved and music we loved began to combine into one package,” Belfiglio adds.

Now, BODEGA – completed by lead guitarist Dan Ryan, bassist Adam See and drummer Adam Shumski – have reinterpreted Our Brand Could Be Yr Life for 2024. “We thought of it like a director remaking one of their old films, like when Hitchcock remade the Man Who Knew Too Much, or when Yasujirō Ozu re-did The Story of Floating Weeds,” says Hozie, who it’s never a surprise to hear talking about music through a cinematic lens. After all, this is a creative who, in addition to his work in BODEGA, moonlights as a celebrated indie filmmaker (PVT Chat, his 2020 drama about online sex work, won rave reviews). “When you're older and better at your craft, you can revisit the same material but do different things with it.” 

The guitarist isn’t kidding. On this rebooted Our Brand, singalongs of old are brought blazing into modern day with heavily reworked arrangements that underline how much their musicianship has grown. ‘Tarkovski’, for example, now features a face-melting solo from Ryan, as part of an extended jam section the band are calling “the closest we've come to working our live improvisations into a record so far.” ‘Set The Controls For The Heart of the Drum’, meanwhile – previously a ninety-second burst of electricity – is now longer, more pounding and funnier than before, with an absurd mid-song skit that speaks to the group’s subtle comic streak. Throw in new songs, like opener ‘Dedicated to the Dedicated’ and the album’s explosive finale ‘City is Taken’ – a song lit up by Shumski’s thundering drum fills – and you’re left with a thrilling time capsule of who BODEGA were and who they’re soon to be. One that, by the way, was recorded using more than one MacBook microphone this time around. “I think it’s our best-sounding record to date,” says Hozie, who produced the album, with long-time collaborator Adam Sachs on engineering and mixing duties.

Everything and nothing has changed since Our Brand’s oldest songs were originally written. Sure, BODEGA may now be cult-adored indie rock truthsayers, lauded for their combination of caterwauling rhythms and literary lyrics about liberals hiding out in Barnes and Noble as protests rage on the streets outside. Yes, releases like 2018’s Endless Scroll and 2022’s Broken Equipment may have found them mentioned in the same breath as the likes of Parquet Courts, Wet Leg and Courtney Barnett. And, of course, their reputation as a scintillatingly energetic live act might have seen them elevate from sweaty basement venues to substantial-sized rooms, invariably sold out. But the brandification of the modern counterculture that Our Brand originally grappled with? That hasn’t budged, not one bit. In fact, if anything it’s become more entrenched, Hozie says.

“The theme is still a pressing one. The idea of the corporatisation of guitar music has only been exacerbated,” he sighs. “The big philosophical question that I end up asking myself is: has it always been this way? Was rock always superficial, but I was just too young and naive to understand? If you look back to 1957 rock music, it had this incredible surge of electricity to it. Chuck Berry really was an underrated poet. I'm not denigrating the original rock'n'roll at all, which I still love and cherish. But it was superficial by design. It was meant to be like a quick product that you could market to teenagers and then toss aside.”

That observation is typical of the intellectual curiosity bred in BODEGA’s music. The duo don’t always have an answer for the malaise – nor are they themselves exempt from the sharp knife they wield as critiquers of the world and its woes. “We made it our mission to challenge the hypocrisy of our scene and ourselves. The best critique is self-critique,” says Hozie, admitting that perhaps BODEGA’s backlash against the word “brand” in rock is itself a brand of sorts that they’re leveraging. On songs like the pummelling ‘ATM’ – whose imagery is echoed in the album’s provocative cover art, crafted by Belfiglio – ideas like this culminate into an important point about how transactional we’ve become as a music scene and a species. “There’s this term called “standing reserve,” which is where you treat something as a means to an end. A field is no longer just a field that we appreciate the beauty of. It becomes about the resources we can extract from it. We use the ATM as a playful metaphor for this. Think of every single person you know – your parents, your lovers, even your best friends. We’ve been trained to think, ‘what do I get out of my relationship with them?’ Social media gets you to think of your whole life as standing reserve. It’s a terrible way to live our lives,” he laments, with a dark chuckle. 

Elsewhere on the record is the lighters-in-the-air anthem ‘Major Amberson’ and the driving ‘G.N.D’ – a song that, from its title (kink slang for “girl next door”) to its eye-opening lyrics from the perspective of a fictional sex worker, further explores Belfiglio’s fascination with the intersection between sex and technology. All that before a recurring character familiar to BODEGA fans steps into the view for a trio of tracks as the album nears its denouement. “The Cultural Consumer is a guy I've noticed around Brooklyn a lot,” Hozie explains of the middle class bohemian figure from whose perspective he frequently writes lyrics. By ‘Cultural Consumer III’, he’s in a car en route to the airport, about to embark on a wellness retreat in Taiwan. But none of that masks the creeping emptiness at his core – this feeling of “having envisioned this exciting, adventurous life for himself where he thought he would inflict change upon the world. Instead, he’s just buying shit.”

Our Brand Could Be Yr Life is a safari tour of indie-rock subgenres for a reason. “It’s got dance-punk. There's some shoegaze on there. There's slacker rock on there. There's psychedelic rock on there. R.E.M, too. We wanted to be another band in a long stream of missionaries, proselytising a certain type of rock subculture,” Hozie says. “'We simultaneously mock and celebrate the rock cannon, hoping to redeem its fall from grace, like foolish missionaries who inherited a stained formal tradition that needs to change in order to become meaningful again.”

Which is sort of where the album title comes in. In 2001, the author Michael Azzarad released Our Band Could Be Your Life – a seminal book that chronicled (and for a young Hozie, instantly mythologised) that same subculture, in all its punk spirit and DIY freedom. 22 years later, riffing on that tome’s name, Hozie and Belfiglio are about to release an album that, for a second time, asks: “what happened? And is there a way out?” For BODEGA, heading down the garden path towards an answer meant first retracing their steps. Sometimes you have to move backwards to move forwards, after all. 

Our Brand Could Be Yr Life is the euphorically poppy proof. 

BODEGA are:

Ben Hozie - guitars, vocals
Nikki Belfiglio - keys, percussion, vocals
Dan Ryan - guitars
Adam See - bass
Adam Shumski - drums

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