Showing posts with label local bands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label local bands. Show all posts

Thursday, February 5, 2026

TDA ushers in a new era at Night Club 101

Photos and interview by Stacie Joy 

Hours before the city’s first significant snowfall in years, TDA (aka Total Display of Affection) took the stage at Night Club 101 on Avenue A on Saturday, Jan. 24 — loud, hypnotic and very much reborn. 

The local band, which began as a trio and built a following with EV shows in Tompkins Square Park, Berlin, and Baker Falls, has entered a new phase: a new name, a new lineup and a shift toward heavier, more ritualistic soundscapes. 

We caught up with bandleader Julia Pierce (below), a onetime East Village resident, after the show to talk about the evolution of TDA, the meaning behind the name change and what comes next.
About the new band name: 

We're introducing a new era of the band under the name Total Display of Affection — a clean slate and a shift toward hypnotic, groove-driven drone rock. It's about embracing intoxicating rhythms and a fresh sonic palette while still acknowledging where we came from. 

Even when we were billed as "Tits Dick Ass," we were technically always "TDA" first, which allowed the meaning to evolve. Right now, Total Display of Affection feels like a maturation — a collective approach to writing, recording and performing that lets the project grow without being trapped by the past. The name can keep shifting as we do.
On why the original name mattered: 

The old name was abrasive on purpose. Punk thrives on confrontation, and we wanted to mirror discomfort back at the audience the way our music did. But it also came from something more personal. 

Conversations around trans people are often reduced to body parts. We are so much more than that. We have souls, thoughts and love to share, yet society politicizes our bodies and overlooks our humanity. The name acted like a mirror reflecting that tension. Using our platform to spark that conversation mattered to me. 

Over time, I noticed people became desensitized to it, which I see as progress. It opened space for other artists to take risks with language. There's something profound in the profane, and that contradiction perfectly captured what we were trying to say. 

On the new TDA: 

Previously, the band leaned into fast, abrasive punk — big noise, speed, and turbulence. We made that statement already. Now I’m drawn toward something slower, heavier, and more spiritual. It feels ritualistic, hypnotic and intentional. 

We’re building on no-wave roots while bridging psych traditions: Public Image Ltd., Lydia Lunch, Sonic Youth, Psychic TV, Rowland S. Howard, Spacemen 3. We’re exploring Eastern guitar scales, alternate tuni,ngs and the mystical side of sound. It’s still noisy, but the noise has shape. 

Is having a punk band still considered punk? Once you reach that status, how long can you maintain it before it feels redundant? I believe we made our statement in that era. Now I find myself in a different phase of life. Expressing existential frustrations through music feels lower frequency compared to the direction TDA is pursuing — something more spiritual and ritualistic, blending musicality and mysticism.

Rather than let the project fade away, I want TDA to reclaim its status as a New York institution while advancing my musical career as a guitarist. I’m trying to break free from tradition while still honoring it. Turns out we're not The Ramones — sorry. There’s still so much space for us to grow as a band. 

On the new lineup: 

The original members moved on to other projects after we were named New York’s Hardest Working Band by Oh My Rockness in 2023. We tried recreating that version, but I learned that replicating the past can stifle creativity. Now we’re embracing a new chapter — and we love Bob Bert. [The veteran drummer has played in Pussy Galore, Sonic Youth and the Chrome Cranks, among others.] We're recording our debut EP, Snake Pit, in Hoboken in the same building that once housed Sonic Youth's Echo Canyon West, where Yo La Tengo still works and where Bob has been a fixture since 1981. 

Mark C. from Live Skull will be engineering the recording session at Deep Sea Studios. We plan to release the EP (tentatively) through Boycott Sleep [an artist-led collective creating spaces for live music outside the existing venues], making it our first official project and debuting as a New York label! 

Jesse Sattler on bass...
DethRok on theremin and shaker...
Bob Bert on drums...
On the past year and what's ahead: 

I spent a year traveling with just a suitcase and a guitar — Australia, Bali, Mexico City, Los Angeles — playing almost every day and making occasional trips back to NYC, which I've called home for more than a decade. That distance helped me imagine a more sustainable direction for the band. 

As we move into 2026, I'm focused less on identity politics and more on musicianship. This phase is about growth, discipline and building something that can last.
Follow TDA on Instagram here.

Friday, October 10, 2025

To whom it may 'Concern'

 

Here's the first video from Tough Darlings, a relatively new band that features some local music veterans (Alice Donut, Wharton Tiers Ensemble, etc.).

The video is for "You of Your Concern." 

Meanwhile, you can see them live on Oct. 26 at Berlin on Avenue A.

Wednesday, July 2, 2025

Tetchy in Tompkins

Photos by Stacie Joy 

It was late Saturday night, after a show at Our Wicked Lady, that Tetchy knew they'd be playing in Tompkins Square Park the following day. 

The local band was a midnight-hour addition to Show Brain's free slate of music on Sunday

We were glad to experience their sinewy punch of punk (a band we really like), despite a hectic day that cut our afternoon at the show short. 

Below... lead singer-guitarist Maggie Denning...
Bassist Kaitlin Pelkey...
Guitarist Jesse French...
and drummer Ransom McCafferty...
Here's the band with Show Brain founder Ozzie on the right...
This was Tetchy's last live show until the end of the summer. They'll be in the recording studio this month.

Leaving you with their summer 2024 single "Mommy"...

 

Friday, June 13, 2025

A band to know: Um, Jennifer?

Photos by Stacie Joy

The playful punk-tinged local duo Um, Jennifer? — Fig on the left, Eli on the right — is on tomorrow's free Show Brain bill in Tompkins Square Park. 

We've had a chance to see Um, Jennifer? a few times, including a record-release show at Night Club 101 on Avenue A this past April 25 (with PMFD)... and we really like them.
Stereogum named them a Band to Watch this spring. Indeed.

Check out their brand new video for "Car Wash" here...

 

Sunday, August 4, 2024

Feeling the need for Suburban Speed

Photos by Stacie Joy 

This past Saturday (July 27), Brooklyn-based Suburban Speed was a late addition to the Show Brain-presented afternoon of live music in Tompkins Square Park. 

It was maybe not the most enviable slot, with just a few people out early for the show, along with some curious passersby. 

Regardless of the time, Carson Walsh (vocals, guitar, soprano saxophone, power drill) and Seth Sosebee (bass, keyboards) were intent on delivering a compellingly abrasive and anarchic set of songs that commanded attention.
To date, Suburban Speed has released several singles ("Pink Plastic Lighter," "Monte Carlo" and "Provolone Pimps.") With their unconventional song structures and Walsh's sometimes free-form vocals delivery, we're looking forward to hearing how they put it all together on a full record.

You can follow the band here.

Friday, August 2, 2024

Three's company

 

This week, local trio Hello Mary (Helena Straight, Stella Wave and Mikaela Oppenheimer) released more new music (and a video!). 

The track "Three" is on the band's forthcoming record, Emita Ox, due out on Sept. 13. 

Hello Mary is headlining a show at Bowery Ballroom on Oct. 24.

Saturday, July 27, 2024

Here's a chance to see vintage East Village band Disturbed Furniture perform live

Longtime East Village resident (and EVG reader) Sue Lashley shared information for the following post. Disclosure: She is married to Disturbed Furniture drummer Mick Oakleaf.

In the early 1980s, the art-rock band Disturbed Furniture made an impact on New York's downtown club scene at storied venues such as Club 57, Mudd Club and Peppermint Lounge. They shared stages with the likes of the Psychedelic Furs, Stranglers, The Waitresses, and The Go-Go's, toured regionally, and released well-received music and videos. 

Their sound was born from the noir cabaret vibe of the East Village scene and the sensuality of contemporary urban sounds, merging the art world and punk sensibilities with grittier dance aesthetics. 

They are back in the East Village for one of their rare shows at 8:45 p.m. on July 30 at the Parkside Lounge, 317 E. Houston St. at Attorney. Doors open at 7 p.m. The free show includes sets by Jennifer Blowdryer and The Bad Flowers, featuring Billy Ficca of Television.
Disturbed Furniture reunited in 2019 to record new music and perform several annual shows. The impetus to reactivate Disturbed Furniture came from MoMA’s major 2017 retrospective, which documented the band's old stomping ground, "Club 57: Film, Performance, and Art in the East Village, 1978-1983." 

After meeting with the curators, lead singer Alexa Hunter agreed to contribute the group's music videos and their single cover art to the exhibition and appear in the accompanying catalog. MoMA not only acquired Disturbed Furniture's music videos proper but also a series of Hunter's super-8 films and other footage shot in 1979. Their 7-inch 45rpm record, Information/Alors Allez, is now sought after by record collectors. It was produced, engineered and mixed by Grammy winner Steve Remote, who runs Aura Sonic Ltd. 

"I can't believe we’ve received big offers from collectors for an original pressing of our single of "Information/Alors Allez" in mint condition,” said Hunter, "and that was before it became part of MoMA's permanent collection. The cover photo was taken in my tiny East Village tenement two buildings down from the Hells Angels clubhouse."

   

Galvanized by the MoMA show, Hunter began tracking down band members still living in NYC and assembled a core line-up of original members featuring guitarist Jorge Arévalo Mateus, now in Brooklyn, and drummer Mick Oakleaf, who is still an East Village resident. Guest bass players include Shin Sakaino, Felice Rosser and Juan Sebastian Monsalve. 

In 2019, Disturbed Furniture released a new five-song EP, Continuous Pleasures, on Arevarc Records. Produced by the core group of Mateus, Hunter and Oakleaf, it was recorded at Mighty Toad Recording and The Honey Jar in Brooklyn, with additional tracks done at Blighty Music Studios in Los Angeles. Continuous Pleasures features new recordings of some of the group's 1980s material and several new songs. The cover art is by Hunter's friend, Kenny Scharf

This year, German label Mad Butcher Classics reissued the single "Information/Alors Allez" using a reproduction of the original cover art. The band is currently recording new songs for future release.

"Hit or Miss" is a 2019 single from 2019 that features footage from 1979...

Friday, July 26, 2024

Feeling 'Blue'

 

The local band Homade released its first music video this past week... check out the punky twang of "Blue Fish" above... and follow @homade.nyc for updates about live shows, etc.

Sunday, July 21, 2024

Bands we like: Francie Moon

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Flashback to last Sunday in Tompkins Square Park, where we caught headliners Francie Moon (aka New Jersey-based musician Melissa Lucciola) in a show organized by Show Brain

We've heard Francie Moon's music, described as "garage psych & rock n roll," though never live until this day. We enjoyed the high-energy set and her appreciation of the opportunity to play in front of an audience.  
Lucciola also plays drums with Gustaf, another band we like. (Gustaf guitarist Vram Kherlopian and percussionist Tarra Thiessen joined this set. And if you're keeping track — they both also play in Tea Eater.)

You can find more from Francie Moon here and here.
The next show we're aware of is the 36th annual Tompkins Square Riot Reunion via The Shadow on Aug. 3.

Friday, July 5, 2024

Upclose with Gustaf at Berlin

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Gustaf was set to headline Sunday's free show via Show Brain in Tompkins Square Park. 

After a galloping set by Shred Flintstone, the rain arrived... and we all left thinking we wouldn't get to see the last two bands — Miranda and the Beat and Gustaf. 

However, we received a message saying the two groups would each be playing sets for free at Berlin, the space under 2A at Avenue A and Second Street. 

We arrived in time to see the art-punk swagger of the Brooklyn-based Gustaf, a two-album quintet gaining momentum thanks to some unbridled live sets, both as headliners and supporting UK acts such as IDLES, Sleaford Mods, and Yard Act.

The last time we encountered Gustaf, they energized the vast outdoor stage with their performance at the Kilby Block Party in May, transforming a potentially dull early afternoon slot into a festival highlight.

Fast-forward to Sunday evening, and they seized every inch of Berlin's intimate venue with unrestrained energy, led by charismatic lead singer Lydia Gammill... (watch a live clip here)...

Friday, June 14, 2024

Zero hour

 

New music (and video!) this week from local trio Hello Mary ... "0%" has a punky fury reminiscent of another trio — Babes in Toyland

The clips come from the band's recent road dates, where they played with Blondshell, Rocket, the Silversun Pickups, and some festivals.

Hello Mary will be on tour for the summer, with a trip to the UK in late August.

Friday, May 3, 2024

Taking it to the streets

 

Pretty Sick has just released the eponymous single from the band's forthcoming (June 27!) EP, Streetwise

On the track, Sabrina Fuentes introduces some new electronic elements, adding a fresh twist to Pretty Sick's sound. (Check out Paper's interview with her here.) 

Previously on EV Grieve:

Saturday, March 9, 2024

Checking out just part of the ongoing New Colossus Festival

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Dream Pop was front and center last night at a showcase at Arlene's Grocery as part of the New Colossus Festival

We stopped by at the start of the bill for Phantom Handshakes, a local collaboration featuring the ethereal vocals of lead singer Federica Tassano ...
...and Matt Sklar (on the right in the striped shirt)...
Check out their music here. (This piece discusses how the two met during the pandemic and started the band.)

We also really liked the first band up, the timeless D.C.-based indie pop trio Flowers for the Dead...(they're playing at Arlene's again tomorrow at noon)...
The New Colossus Festival continues today and tomorrow at EV/Lower Side music venues. Find the schedule here.

Saturday, February 10, 2024

Saturday's parting shot

Photo by Derek Berg 

A moment this evening with Twisted Wrist in front of the Bowery Mural Wall...

Thursday, January 25, 2024

Photos: Tetchy headlines the Knitting Factory at Baker Falls on Avenue A

Photos by The Hella Sketchy 

Last Thursday night, Knitting Factory at Baker Falls on Avenue A played host to a Tetchy EP release show.

The Brooklyn-based band — guitarist-vocalist Maggie Denning, guitarist Jesse French, bassist Kaitlin Pelkey, and drummer Max Goldstein — has unleased its latest collection of empowering punk, All In My Head, via Trash Casual.

Here are a few scenes from the band's headlining performance...
You can keep tabs on Tetchy via Instagram. Look for their video for "Psychosomatic" tomorrow... and expect to hear more from the band in 2024, including dates at SXSW...