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.

Bob Ross Mob Boss Grapple With Their Past and Present on Everything's Chrome in the Future

“Crop Top Core” band Bob Ross Mob Boss lead with the heart and the reverb on their new EP Everything’s Chrome in the Future (out 02/07).

photo by Hazel Jacobs

photo by Hazel Jacobs

The tumultuous new EP from Bob Ross Mob Boss, Everything’s Chrome in the Future, introduces itself with a disarming self-awareness. Vocalist and guitarist Bray Fischer sings “again and again I recall/the gravity of my own fall” on the opening track ‘Barricade’. The four piece are propelled forward by a heart-on-your-sleeve approach, their emo influence evident in their collective ethos. On ‘Never Meant to Live’ vocalist and guitarist Aaron Mylungs sings “and I know that I wanna stay alive/but sometimes I don't try” with a teen angst that has morphed into adult depression. There is a desire to get better on Everything’s Chrome in the Future, but recovery is never a linear process; self care goes out the window when simply existing another day feels overwhelming. Nick Howe’s drumming accentuates the latter half of the track, pummeling over the vocals and muscling the song forward before allowing the guitars to cauterize the end. This EP is swathed in fuzz with guitar solos baked in and prolonged outros adding a final flourish. Bob Ross Mob Boss’ music is perhaps the opposite of no nonsense, their generous use of reverb being one of their more distinguishing traits. On the other hand, they feel so deeply it’s almost brutal. ‘Honestly, Honesty’ emerges from toxicity, navigating how to trust anyone’s word after becoming so used to dishonesty and neglect. The track is plucked out string by string, staggering in and out of a metal guitar hook before Emme Krofta pulls back the commanding bass and allows for the lens to refocus on Mylungs’ drawl. Everything’s Chrome in the Future is textured, steely guitars rushing in with an in your face bass. The band is careful to choose which transitions are seamless and which bum rush you. They’re masters in tonal changes, weaving their love for the fuzzed out and fried with their post punk inspiration. This adds to the EP’s consistency, creating new languages out of previously frayed genres. The guitars ping off each other for a twang that manages to complement the painstaking lyrics. It surges forward, honest and pulsing, the band paying respect to what’s kept them alive this long. Bob Ross Mob Boss self describe as “chronic oversharers” and that’s more than apparent here. ‘I’m Ok (I Promise)’ drifts in, a poetic controlled burn. “It's the softly falling snow settling in the trees/it's a deep night forest of evergreen” harmonize Fischer and Mylungs. The moments where Fischer’s gravelly baritone intersect with Mylungs add dimension, bolstering their narratives instead of overwhelming them. ‘What’s Past is Prologue’ is a track scored by self sabotage, the band grappling with a grief they feel for themselves. A wavering, elastic guitar solo carries us into a warped interlude. “I thought that I would know me better/after all this time/turns out I hurt me the most”, the sound turns haunted, distorting Emotional Dorm Room into Shoegaze Inspired Shredder. Everything’s Chrome in the Future lingers, it’s not immediate but drawn out, inviting you to step in and wallow and be bandaged. On the emotional anchor of the album, ‘Pressure’, Fischer is left to carry the vocals. But they seem to take the burden with pride. It’s the first time they sound in control, giving the EP a perfect character arc. “I love the ride/but I fear the crash” sings Fischer- when you are finally able to depart from the sadness and toxicity you’ve become accustomed to it can feel like waiting for the other shoe to drop. The guitars are metallic and syncopated, taking over the bass. Eventually the rhythm crashes into itself before fading out. Though many chronic oversharers tend to suffer from word vomit as well, Bob Ross Mob Boss are intentional, the six songs satisfying the same as a full album. The band coaxes out each track, letting us marinate in it. Though I’m not a proponent of long songs Bob Ross Mob Boss have created something worth the wait. They’re never killing time but taking us in for as long as they can before having no choice but to move forward.

photo by Billie Wolf

photo by Billie Wolf

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Bob Ross Mob Boss will be playing an EP release show at the 7th st. Entry on February 16th

All Blood: A Review of Invisible Ax

Self-described “all trans band” 4th Curtis release their EP, Invisible Ax today (11/29)

cover art by Joshlynn Borreson

cover art by Joshlynn Borreson

In the time leading up to the release they’ve taken to tweeting under “LIZZIE BORDEN” (though they are known for changing their username whenever it suits them). And in Invisible Ax it’s all funny ‘til it’s not. On the opening track ‘Nonstop’ lead vocalist and guitarist Lex Noens sings “blood on my guitar strings makes me feel so intense”, making Taylor Swift’s teardrops null in comparison. This opener is both a testament to what they’re willing to drain themselves of and what has been taken from them. The vocals and keys of Ty Gale shine on ‘Marie Antoinette’, playing a posh minor tone that almost mocks Maddie Morley’s energetic drumming. And 4th Curtis’ impeccable charm is ever present, Noens comparing themselves to Marie Antoinette because their “rack is huge”. Noens and Gale have a knack for singing their gags with the same seriousness as their anxieties, lyrics like “I want to be the older woman my kid’s friends want to fuck” are treated with purpose. Everything on Invisible Ax is heightened, and when Gale sings “do you think I’m pretty?” it’s with painful sincerity. Invisible Ax has a keen way of answering its own questions. 

From a distance the EP is a catchy onslaught with a dark sense of humor but up close it’s wringing its hands and asking you a very important question, afraid of being just an exposed body. The stand out track is ‘Julius Cesar’, Noens seering with pop vigor. Invisible Ax never allows anything to sound as dire as it really is, it bobs and weaves in constant motion. “Julius Cesar died last night/the throne is mine for the taking”. The throne- what it must be like to briefly feel full despite so much emptiness. To see a piece of a person who you’ll never wholly experience again. When all else fails we desire a place we consider home and someone to call our names in a way that sounds familiar, but that warmth has long been forgotten. There’s a painful irony aching inside Invisible Ax: 4th Curtis is giving every piece of themselves, their limbs and bodily fluids, but the one thing being demanded of them is something they don’t have to give. Morley drives ‘Goth Fuck’ (or as the lyric sheet for the press reads “spelled Goth F-ck if not allowed in a specific application)”, the most self indicting piece of the EP. But the rock interlude with Gale and Morley softly ‘ooh-ing’ as backup suggests otherwise. “I want to hurt him/I want him to like it” sings Noens, 4th Curtis never being ones to write themselves as strongest on the page. As artists they find themselves both the protagonist and antagonist of their own lives. They are a comedy and a tragedy, their own greek chorus piling in and reminding us of the existence of sadness and love and pain and memes. 

When you run out of ways to write about sadness or grief or oppression you weaponize it. You turn it into heated sax solos and irresistible melodies. The EP closes with the blistering ‘No Artist’, Noens and Gale lamenting “why do I always break for the broken ones?” They are focused and loving. 4th Curtis plays the self-deprecating role well, but this EP involves comparisons to Marie Antoinette, the Virgin Mary, Julius Cesar, and Lizzie Borden- people known for the way they exchange flesh. But the band isn’t a broken limb or a drained vessel, they’re the weapon, the wielder, the predator. They’re unflinching. Their sense of humor congeals it together, death and sweetness thickening to concrete in order to support the emotional weight. Invisible Ax explores pain in a way that is clever and catchy and for whatever reason, historical. It is difficult work asking people to listen to your flaws and not asking them to absolve you of guilt in return but to sit with you inside it. And in doing so they’ve transmogrified their sound completely. Invisible Ax, in name alone, is not an invitation but a statement of intent. It is waiting, unseen, indicative of what’s to come with absolute precision. And did 4th Curtis get away with it? Of course they did. But the axe is double ended. Like the EP’s poster child Lizzie Borden, they’ve gotten away with it all. But they still carry the evidence with them.

photo by Kathy Callahan

photo by Kathy Callahan


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Recap: Gully Boys Reunite With the Twin Cities

Gully Boys played the Turf Club this past Sunday after a tour with Wisconsin punks, Gender Confetti. And we weren’t ready.

photo by Juliet Farmer

photo by Juliet Farmer

On Sunday night prodigal sons, Gully Boys, returned home to the Turf Club after an eighteen day tour. Their tourmates Gender Confetti cracked open the show with a large trans pride flag pinned up behind them. They waste no time with pleasantries and dive into a song called “Ask First” in which guitarist and vocalist Sylvia Johnson (they/she) yells “I believe Christine Ford and I believe Anita Hill”. Johnson, clad in a red lingerie set with “gender” tattooed above one collarbone and “deviant” above the other, is fierce. They’re combustive and dare the audience to meet their gaze. But there’s a sentimentality to their militant bite; the duo dedicates one of their last songs to Gully Boys after affirming that the two bands are family before delving into a final queer clatter.

Long-standing icons Kitten Forever offer more than local support, taking the stage for ransom while yelping into their signature yellow telephone rigged as a mic. Kitten Forever are always a sight as they never stay still. They round robin, switching instruments mid song. As Laura Larson steps aside from the drum kit to wail on “The Hawk” I realize how few cis men seem to be in attendance. Or rather, it’s after I find myself joining a light-hearted mosh pit and realizing I’m not being handled by a sweaty dude in an old Direct Hit tee but by some half-shaved heads with well done eyebrows. As the band bangs “tell me what I want tell me what I want” they switch again- no need to stop the riot. During the end of the set they pounce on “Temple” with Corrie Harrigan strutting into the crowd with a righteous circle forming around her, the crowd hollering the lyrics too.

When I say that Gully Boys know how to draw a crowd, I mean it. One of the first things I learn upon getting to the gig is that drummer Nadirah McGill would have have a former high school teacher in attendance (I had the pleasure of meeting him after the set and let me just say, he was pumped). Roddie Gadeberg and Sage Livergood of Niiice, Lex Noens of 4th Curtis, and Bailey Cogan of 26 BATS! were there as well. This is all proof of the Boys’ magnetism, their homecoming acts as the center of the venn diagram for the music lovers and creators of the Twin Cities. But there’s not much time to stand around and survey the crowd before Gully Boys catapult into “I Wanna Go Home!”, propulsive as ever. And the crowd is in their hands just like that. It doesn’t matter that it’s a Sunday night, Gully Boys are impossible to ignore. Bassist Natalie Klemond steers on with a quiet fervor during “Neopet Graveyard” and during the thundering “Big Bad Luvr” I swear on my life that the three parents who were flocked together at the very front of the stage gently nudged each other in a Baby Boomer mosh pit of three. And I don’t blame them, lead vocalist and guitarist Kathy Callahan would make Courtney Love jealous with her snarling. During a pause for tuning McGill tells tour stories: as it happens, McGill broke their ankle while touring and the band ended up sitting in the ER. They sold merch while in the hospital. The Boys’ are so effervescent on stage, it comes as no surprise that they could turn hospital staff into stans. And it’s a testament to their work ethic that McGill was still playing drums as ardent as ever. During the tender-hearted “Sugar Scrub” McGill’s partner could be seen with an enclave of equally dedicated fans and friends in the audience, arms linked and swaying. The sticky sweet center of the set, I earn a kiss from my plus one and sway too. But the Boys keep a tight set, rolling into the billowing “Nosy Heart” with Callahan announcing “this one is for dads”. The crowd follows Callahan’s every cue, waiting for her riffs before singing along to her intense howls. Gully Boys craft an irresistible crowd/performer dynamic, they form a give and take of power with the audience. So after the final shatter of drums the singular shout of “ENCORE” was met with “should we do greasy?” And of course they played “Greasy”. I stepped aside so that someone could pull their more reluctant friend (girlfriend?) to the front and dance together. The audience matches the band’s passion beat for beat throughout the night. All Turf Club occupants could be heard yelling “it’s 4pm I’m sleeping in” on repeat until the final harmony of the song. It’s as if nothing outside this set exists. In equal parts love for each other, love for their fans, and love for their music Gully Boys are so genuine this show can’t be described as anything other than punk rock. But it’s not just a homecoming for the Boys, it’s a homecoming for everyone there. For the deviants and the girls who mosh and the partners who know all the lyrics. It’s a potent reunion that reminds us why Gully Boys are so integral to the Twin Cities and why their music is so necessary. Gully Boys have the uncanny ability to bring out the bravest and boldest parts of ourselves and it brings us as fans, as artists, and as people who still hold a hairbrush to their mouth in front of the mirror closer. 

photo by Juliet Farmer

photo by Juliet Farmer

Had the unfortunate luck of missing this show? Poor time management? While you’ll be delighted to know that Gully Boys will be in residency at the 7th Street Entry this December where they will be playing every Sunday. Each night of the residency they plan on releasing a new song off the EP they are currently teasing us with. 

Can’t wait ‘til December? Well it would be unrealistic to assume that Gully Boys would be taking a break anytime soon. So obviously they’ll be releasing not only a new song, but an accompanying music video in the near future. And though I can’t say much about the video, which spans the decades, I will leave you with this: Kathy can in fact pull off a soul patch.