Gurriers 9/16
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A special Baltimore presale starts Thurs 10am using passcode: OTTO
Gurriers
more TBA
When Dublin’s Gurriers released 2024 debut album Come And See, they underlined their status
as a visceral, unignorable new voice in the thriving Irish punk scene. Having formed during the
pandemic, in the years since, the original members - vocalist Dan Hoff, guitarists Ben O'Neill
and Mark MacCormack and drummer Pierce Callaghan - had carved out a steadily escalating
reputation for bone-rattling, mosh-ready live shows. Come And See pushed their lyrical chops
and curious, socially-exploratory outlook to the fore too, platforming songs about digital angst
and IRL terror in the modern world.
In the months following its release, the milestones kept coming for the band: a slot on Later with
Jools Holland; main stage performances in the Woodsies and Leftfield tents at Glastonbury; an
arena support back in their hometown with Turnstile and with Kneecap at Wembley. With
bassist Charlie McCarthy now fully settled into the throng, bringing a fresh burst of enthusiasm
having joined the band at the beginning of 2024 - sometime after their debut had been recorded
and before it was released that September, they found the new music they were starting to pen
was innately reflective of this vast step up in their ante.
“You write songs for the environment that you’ll hear them in, so when we were playing small,
250 capacity rooms then [we wrote] a sweaty punk record,” Callaghan reflects of their debut.
“But now, playing bigger festival stages and supporting in arenas, it changes how you approach
songwriting. You’re thinking about what sort of environment these songs are gonna be heard in,
and how they’ll exist in that space.”
Gurriers’ superb second album might be called Nobody’s Coming To Save You, then, but it
could easily be subtitled ‘harder, better, faster, stronger’. Recorded at Donegal’s Attica Studios
and Holy Mountain Studios in London with producers Mark Bowen of Idles and Loren Humphrey
(Geese, Cameron Winter), alongside engineer Chris Fullard (Idles, Sunn O))) and worldrenowned mixer John Congleton (St. Vincent, Modest Mouse, Swans), the crack team that
readily assembled for LP2 speaks volumes of its quality from the off. This is Gurriers taking all
the musical chemistry and smart, interrogational worldview that made them great in the first
place, and souping it up to the next level
A special Baltimore presale starts Thurs 10am using passcode: OTTO
Gurriers
more TBA
When Dublin’s Gurriers released 2024 debut album Come And See, they underlined their status
as a visceral, unignorable new voice in the thriving Irish punk scene. Having formed during the
pandemic, in the years since, the original members - vocalist Dan Hoff, guitarists Ben O'Neill
and Mark MacCormack and drummer Pierce Callaghan - had carved out a steadily escalating
reputation for bone-rattling, mosh-ready live shows. Come And See pushed their lyrical chops
and curious, socially-exploratory outlook to the fore too, platforming songs about digital angst
and IRL terror in the modern world.
In the months following its release, the milestones kept coming for the band: a slot on Later with
Jools Holland; main stage performances in the Woodsies and Leftfield tents at Glastonbury; an
arena support back in their hometown with Turnstile and with Kneecap at Wembley. With
bassist Charlie McCarthy now fully settled into the throng, bringing a fresh burst of enthusiasm
having joined the band at the beginning of 2024 - sometime after their debut had been recorded
and before it was released that September, they found the new music they were starting to pen
was innately reflective of this vast step up in their ante.
“You write songs for the environment that you’ll hear them in, so when we were playing small,
250 capacity rooms then [we wrote] a sweaty punk record,” Callaghan reflects of their debut.
“But now, playing bigger festival stages and supporting in arenas, it changes how you approach
songwriting. You’re thinking about what sort of environment these songs are gonna be heard in,
and how they’ll exist in that space.”
Gurriers’ superb second album might be called Nobody’s Coming To Save You, then, but it
could easily be subtitled ‘harder, better, faster, stronger’. Recorded at Donegal’s Attica Studios
and Holy Mountain Studios in London with producers Mark Bowen of Idles and Loren Humphrey
(Geese, Cameron Winter), alongside engineer Chris Fullard (Idles, Sunn O))) and worldrenowned mixer John Congleton (St. Vincent, Modest Mouse, Swans), the crack team that
readily assembled for LP2 speaks volumes of its quality from the off. This is Gurriers taking all
the musical chemistry and smart, interrogational worldview that made them great in the first
place, and souping it up to the next level
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2549 N Howard St, Baltimore, MD 21218-4506, United States
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