San Francisco Art Punks Rip Room Debut “Dead When It Started”

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San Francisco Art Punks Rip Room Debut “Dead When It Started” Off The Upcoming Album ‘Alight and Resound’ Out May 27

Recorded with Engineer Tim Green (Melvins, Bikini Kill, Sebadoh)

FFO: Gang of Four, DEVO, Unwound, Fugazi

“San Francisco’s Rip Room make post-hardcore music with an air of art pop exuberance.”- Post-Trash

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“Noisy, Dischord-inspired post-hardcore.”- The Alternative

“Razor-sharp blend of noise rock, punk, and art rock with plenty of intensity and grit.”- Destroy/Exist

“With the fervor of Unwound, Hüsker Dü, Sleater-Kinney, and Fugazi, Rip Room spews out propulsive rhythms and piercing lyrics wrapped in a buoyant glee.”- Post-Punk

“Art punk that just straight up rocks. “Complication,” is an amalgam of a bunch of your favorite classic punk sounds and bands. There’s the post punk of Gang of Four, the buzzing guitars of Dead Kennedys, the bouncy New Wave goes almost pop of Talking Heads and B-52s, and even some of the noise of Sonic Youth…as furious as it is pop adjacent. It sounds like punk made for adults who are still angry at the world but don’t have the energy to be mad all the time.” – If It’s Too Loud

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San Francisco art-punk trio Rip Room has unveiled “Dead When It Started” the next single off the upcoming album ‘Alight and Resound,’ which comes out on May 27 via Spartan Records.

Stream the song here.

Singer-guitarist John Reed says, “Dead When It Started” is a good intro to Rip Room for the uninitiated: it’s an indictment disguised as a dance song. If the height of human interaction is the sum of our institutions plus the current state of social media, then our ability to solve real problems quickly approaches zero. The system is rigged! And worse, our tools for communication are essentially games that demand our attention and little else (and if it’s not clear, I count myself among the implicated here). Contrary to the lyrics, the tune is super fun! It’s maybe the most accessible song on the record, which makes the disconnect from the lyrics a bit cheeky. I remember the main riff sort of materialized out of thin air, and aside from the proggy breaks, it’s basic pop. That’s Gracie pounding on a car fender with a hammer before the outro, and there’s a ton of the Bass Rhodes on this track which makes it extra beefy.”

Pre-order ‘Alight and Resound’ here: https://spr.tn/riproom

Pre-save the album here: https://orcd.co/riproom

RIP ROOM:

John Reed – Vocals/Guitar

Sarah Mckinney – Bass/Vocals

Gracie Malley – Drums

In a time of digital polish and studio patchwork, it has become increasingly rare to hear a record that captures the lightning-in-a-bottle dynamics of a live performance. Music continues to fill our queues, but it feels less and less human, so when a record breaks through the static, it can be a revelation. Introducing the wound-up art punks in San Francisco’s Rip Room.

After successfully self-releasing and touring on two EPs, the three-piece returned to Louder Studios in Grass Valley, CA to reunite with storied engineer Tim Green (Nation of Ulysses, Melvins, Bikini Kill, Sebadoh). The result is the charismatic and alluringly unpredictable debut full-length record, ‘Alight and Resound’, twelve pulsing songs that harken back to better musical times while somehow embracing the relevance of the moment. Think Unwound, Sleater-Kinney, and Fugazi. Propulsive rhythms and piercing lyrics, but with a sense of buoyancy. Brashness over banality. Wolves in sheep’s clothing.

“I wanted to be in a fun, high-energy band, but with a math-y, prog edge,” says Reed. “We’re always looking to capture our live sound, and with this record, we wanted that plus a little more to emphasize some ideas or sonic feelings,” adds bassist/vocalist Sarah McKinney. “The subject matter is pretty heavy, but the execution is sometimes a bit more lighthearted and dance-y which I think balances it out well. Our sound was once described as ‘dance music for people who don’t like to dance,’ which I don’t agree with — I’d say it’s ‘dance music for people who like to dance but are also bummed out’.”

Thematically, while instrumentally effervescent, ‘Alight and Resound’ delves into some more turbulent lyrical waters. Loneliness, chaos, despair, and struggle — yet somehow with a glimmer of hope. “The title of the record is a lyric from the song ‘Get On In The World,’ which is in part about frustration and not really fitting in,” says Reed. “Everyone’s focused or too wrapped up in their own shit and sadly this too often devolves into misunderstandings, at best, and violence, at worst. Alight and Resound is like a plea — move to a different plane of understanding and empathy or else we’re fucked.”

Thriving in the Bay Area is no simple task for a band in these times. As competition grows, venues close, and rents continue to rise, the desire for authenticity in art will only increase. Alight and Resound is a testament to the power of seeking brashness over banality. There is perceptible life and light in the recordings that grow with each listen, and the authenticity of the experience is both palpable and revitalizing.

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