Best of the Midwest 2021

Earlier this year [REDACTED] Magazine asked me to do a roundup of my five favorite albums that came out of the Midwest in 2021. But they killed the piece. So here is my list coming to you live from my little blog. Less and less I engage with AotY lists etc, partially because of the increasing tedium and partially because of what an exhausting year it’s been. But I’d hate to let these words go to waste and it’s always a pleasure to hype my favorite region.


There is something distinctly Midwestern about long stretches of road, a constant state of departure and arrival. I can’t help but soundtrack my way around through the year, and I like to begin where I began (in the Chicago area) and pay homage to bands that started humble there too. Now in Minneapolis I am still writing from a place of discovery, still receiving a music education from basements and mosh pits where everyone is holding their giant winter coats in one hand. The albums I take time with here have also, with great care, carried themselves across the many seasons of the Midwest. VIAL entered my life during a heat wave, The Ophelias as the air started to crisp. They are albums best listened to either brazenly stripped down or tenderly layered up, on your way to wherever it is you belong in this very moment. May these albums find you both traveling far away, and always close to home.


Bless My Psyche - Sincere Engineer

The sophomore album from Chicago based Sincere Engineer, A.K.A. Deanna Belos, is hit to emo hit. The introduction ‘Trust Me’ transitions seamlessly into ‘Tourniquet’, never allowing for the beginning chunk of the album to catch a breath in between. It’s like there’s no time left and Belos has to play it all before the sun goes down and there’s work again in the morning. There are some breaks on the album, ‘Recluse in the Making’ is soft and acoustic save for a surging bass line. But it’s only for a minute before Belos is proclaiming “I wanna touch you with my mouth/I wanna drink ‘til we pass out” on ‘Hurricane of Misery’. Bless My Psyche is largely a product of self awareness, unrequited love, and late nights. Deeply into self deprecating humor and earnesty, Belos continues writing gruff anthems for the underdog.

Crocus - The Ophelias

The Ophelias are narrators that tend to bring you in at the middle of a story and force you to consider all of the characters in a song. It adds to the surreal nature of their songwriting, where former lovers are “carcassed like hunted game.” Frontperson Spencer Peppet sings about figures that claw her eyes out and trees that look like a former lover; ‘Spirit Sent’ is a song of the ghosts of love, finding each other one last time and apologizing, confirming that The Ophelias make music in another realm. Crocus moves between string heavy and low-fi with Mic Adams’ weighty drumming adding more meat to the sometimes sparse bones of the Ophelias. ‘Biblical Names’ is led by a heavy piano that reverberates and lingers before being joined by a fluttering violin. ‘Neil Young on High’ tends a delicate harmony between Peppet and Julien Baker. ‘Spitting Image’ is gentle and folksy, invoking a Midwestern kind of pain, “a pair of kids beneath the winter snow.” There is something both warm and incredibly brisk about Crocus. The Ophelias, like the climate in their home state of Ohio, refuse to be just one thing, just one genre, just one person. If you’re someone who may find themselves walking home from a party in the cold or enjoying the frozen sidewalks reflecting streaks of sunlight, then this album is for you. 

I Want The Door to Open - Lala Lala

More than anything, I Want the Door Open, the third album from Lala Lala or Lilie West embraces the unknown. There is an abundance on the album, both in its feeling of water and its collaboration. It is generous in talent with everyone from Sen Morimoto to Ben Gibbard lending their creativity. At the same time it lacks presence, doesn’t need to be perceived, sits in the center of the light. West seeks a pureness, “I want to look right into the camera”. On ‘DIVER’ she is frustrated, “I can't look directly at it.”.  The album moves through extremes, extreme love, extreme fear, extreme pain. And to feel the emotional extremities is worth it. West finds thrill and fantasy in looking what scares her in the eye. ‘Photo Photo’ is almost Gregorian in nature, a layered round of harmonies featuring Ohmme. There’s a surreal quality to it that appears more blatantly on tracks like ‘Castle Life’ and ‘Utopia Planet’. ‘Castle Life’ is a synth thrumming to life, “I wish that I could see / what’s right in front of me / which reality / is actuality (fantasy)”. And ‘Color Of The Pool’ pulls nothing short of a magic trick with its fever of horns. The door never really opens, but we’re always reaching.

Favorite Son - Gully Boys

Though Gully Boys’ Bandcamp bio describes them as “three scrappy boys writing songs in the basement,” the boys ain’t so scrappy these days, parading full rock n’ roll theatrics. Their latest EP, Favorite Son centers around the titular track, guitarist and vocalist Kathy Callahan wailing “power is born/a beautiful boy/I was born/knowing what I want.” The trick is that Gully Boys aren’t a girl band--Callahan might’ve been born in the margins, but now she’s the first boy of her kind. Gully Boys take the power back. As much as they are the rocker boys they’ve always dreamt of being, they’re also their own mothers. ‘In Another Life’ is a devastating look at what if, a nostalgia for a life never lived. The track enters with gentle keys and a strummy accompanying guitar, Callahan’s voice pitching up into a gentle soprano. It’s a narrative detour for the band, building a world where a woman will “never raise her voice, never resent her choice, [and] might even do this again”. ’I’m Not Yours’ has a pop sensibility, the shinier side of the EP. Which isn’t to say it doesn’t get loud. The track refuses to “fade away” into a relationship that’s not working and instead decides to step away and get to know itself. ‘Russian Doll’ is surging, a powerhouse effort all topped off with Callahan’s snarl. It’s the final act of independence for the band, “there's no one comin' to makе things right”. In a world void of the real, where the algorithm tells us exactly what kind of consumers we are and we buy our security, Gully Boys set out to save the world. And they just might.

LOUDMOUTH - VIAL

I had the pleasure of interviewing bassist Kate Kanfield and guitarist KT Branscom of VIAL earlier this year when I was spending several days of the week laying out in the sun, listening to music. VIAL is not a sun soaked band but perhaps the catharsis found in their newest album LOUDMOUTH will help me through the loveless months. LOUDMOUTH is a fever break in the cis male dominated music scene. The quartet are angry, gutsy, and unapologetically queer, landing themselves somewhere in the Riot Grrrl lineage but ultimately breaking tradition. The album shifts from revenge fantasies about running boys over with your car to rock n’ roll odes to anxious introversion. Vocalist Taylor Kraemer is a delightful spitfire on tracks like ‘Planet Drool’ and ‘Mr. Fuck You’ while bringing a welcome sweetness to ‘Something More’. Blowing the concept of “Minnesota nice” to smithereens they shriek at boys to get therapy and call them boring to their faces. LOUDMOUTH also contains a no holds barred feminist look at the DIY music scene where too often the most manipulative men are seated on a pedestal. With feisty music and fierce friendship, VIAL carves out space for girls, gays, and ghouls in the music industry.

Emily Blue Is Reflective On Her New Single 'Aperture'

Chicago’s rising pop queen Emily Blue reveals plush new track, ‘Aperture’, in collaboration with producer Uuskhy

Photo by Morgan Paije

Photo by Morgan Paije

In a drastic departure from the bait and switch of ‘17’ and the reckless catchy hooks of ‘Bad Decisions’, Emily Blue gives way to ‘Aperture’. It’s an intimate single with Blue appearing stripped down. “The beach looks starving in winter” she sings during a time in which beaches will remain starving and empty despite the warmth. There is a solitude being explored here, but to dub it as another quarantine song would be reductive. Quarantine has affected the sound, sure, but the track has been three years in the making. Blue tells me “we've been toying around with various demos of ‘Aperture’ for a while, but it's not until quarantine happened that I reconnected with the song in such a visceral way”. Blue works with the fresh paint, opening with a delicate piano and a synth flickering in and out. In the trailer for the song she’s comfortable in the quiet as clouds pass through her skin, she gently places her hand on the camera which briefly scrambles before switching directions and focusing in on a purple sky. ‘Aperture’ is a crack in the mask. Here you couldn’t even imagine her glitchy hair metal riffs or leather adorned outfits. Instead of upping the ante she’s changed the end game entirely; less sticky and neon, more distilled. Fluid and ambient she returns to the narrative roots planted on Another Angry Woman, her 2016 debut EP, redeveloping a more poetic sensibility. Her voice is layered in a hypnotic rhythm, “how?” she pitches up into a soprano “how long, til I wear it out and I tear it down?” Some people love things until they are worn down and tattered, refusing to let go. And those people are not necessarily wrong. This is what happens when artists push themselves for authenticity. ‘Aperture’ is a willingness to dive deeper. It is a reflective pause in her discography. On ‘Aperture’ we can almost see the hole in which the light passes through. 

Photo by Morgan Paije

Photo by Morgan Paije

Question Everything: A Q&A With NO MEN

NO MEN are a booming punk band out of Chicago, IL. With the power of dual drums and a sturdy bass, they’re anything but a boy band. Since they’re not “talkers”, we chatted via email about guitar rock, horror movies, and their new album, Hell Was Full So We Came Back.

photo by Aaron Ehinger

photo by Aaron Ehinger

On your website (nofuckingmen.com) you say there’s “no guitar rock allowed”. Could you define guitar rock? Do you feel like guitars are kind of a symbol for butt rock and boys clubs in the music scene?

DB: You answered the first question with the second question! Most definitely. There’s a lot of heavy, noisy music we *almost* love that just has such an aggressively MASCULINE vibe that it’s off-putting. There’s nothing wrong with the guitar, but I get the vibe traditional instrumentation ends up being used...lazily? Why is there the persisting stereotype of a girl bassist and lead male guitarist in these indie punk bands? Question everything!

One of my favorite ways you describe yourselves is “opposite of yes men”. Do you try to make the spaces you play in the opposite of “yes men” too? 

DB: To the best of our ability. We’re blessed that there’s so many welcoming and loving individuals involved in the music scene in Chicago that we don’t usually have to worry about bad vibes.

Pursley: I think that kinda happens on it’s own. The people who really *get* us tend to share our mindset.

Seeing you play live is a very visceral experience, in a sense it’s very satisfying. Does NO MEN provide you with a lot of catharsis? 

DB: Does catharsis mean sweating a lot? If so, then yes.

Pursley: Oh yes. Love to rock. 10/10 would recommend.

Eric: Without a doubt.  And a lot of bloody fingers and broken drumsticks.

You’re a very succinct band lyrically. How do you think you’re able to convey so much emotion instrumentally? 

Eric: I think when you strip things down to just drums and bass, your left with a rhythm your mind and body can latch on to easier. The beats demand your attention. Less instrumentation feels less restrictive and allows us to be more creative and emphasize what we are really good at. More noise would only get in the way. 

Pursley, you sing “I’ll tell the truth/I always do” on the new single ‘Sucker’. Could you speak a bit more to that line and just the idea of controlling your own narrative in general?

Pursley: To me it’s a taunting request of like “hey buddy i am being truthful, now it’s YOUR TURN”, as to demand accountability. Sometimes you gotta check someone, y’know? You can never truly force anyone to be honest, but who cares really. All you have at the end of the day is your own truth. Keep on truckin’.

Your lyrics are mostly pretty personal, they seem to speak to the same person or at least the same kind of person. Who are you usually talking to (if you’re comfortable answering)?

DB: This may not even be a conscious thing really, but our lyrics may be general so that a lot of people can relate to it. We’re almost never like, “fuck this particular thing!” We want our music to be an ally to whatever your struggle or frustration is. The themes are universal.

Pursley: Yeah I like some room for interpretation. There are definitely *many* things in life that I’m like “i do not like this”, but they are all sort of interchangeable and similar.

At least in your music videos, you confront horror pretty literally with summoning demons on ‘Sucker’ and some horror film homages on ‘Stay Dumb’. Are you pretty drawn to themes from that genre?

DB: Definitely! A large part of the vision comes from our friend Greg Reigh, who wrote and directed those videos, and is very into Dario Argento and the like. Mandy was also a big influence recently. We just honestly love metal and Black Sabbath and motorcycles and shit so much.

Pursley: Hell yes, big horror fans over here. Greg is a visionary and always comes through with some killer ideas. Literally.

You have a new LP Hell Was Full So We Came Back out this Friday, and I read that your first LP was recorded in only two days. What was the recording process like this time around?

DB: Spread out over a much longer period of time, about a year from the first day we laid down some tracks in the studio to the end of mixing, in bits and pieces. The oldest song that made it on this album was written in probably like early 2017, and the most recently written one was from like, this May. We do all the basic tracks live, so it hardly takes us any time to actually physically “record”, but then we had several sessions with our good friend Doug Malone, who recorded us at his studio JAMDEK, tweaking the sounds and trying crazy effects and overdubbing stuff. In hindsight we may have spent a lot of time on parts that ended up not mattering - the things we like most about these recordings came about somewhat accidentally, organically. Doug really helped us keep tracks stripped down and to the point when we needed it.

Is the album title indicative of what the band has been through in the past three years since your first LP?

DB: Let’s just say we’ve all been through a lot in these last three years in America.

Pursley: Goddamn right.

photo by Aaron Ehinger

photo by Aaron Ehinger


Hell Was Full So We Came Back out 11/15 on Let’s Pretend Records


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