
Nightmoves / Various Blonde
Sat, Mar 12, 8:00 pm - Sun, Mar 13, 12:00 am
Entry at 8:00 pm
Age restriction
No limit
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8PM DOORS
9PM SHOW
Minneapolis-based quartet Night Moves return with the psychedelic new song “Fallacy Actually.” The
first track in a series of new singles to be released incrementally over the next year, “Fallacy Actually” is
a head-spinning swirl of layered synths, harmonica, and guitar and a fitting introduction to the band’s
next chapter.
Singer John Pelant describes the track as, “A dense cosmic romp that deals with personal fears and
letting go. The inevitable end of things, hatred versus acceptance, flawed thoughts, and what could have
been. I wanted it to have a NOVA, UFO abduction, backroom Estonian roller rink discotheque kind of
vibe. The song went through a lot of changes, styles, and moods. I think we ended up in a nice place. I
love the soft flute - makes me think of Canned Heat meets Motown meets The Spinners on acid.”
“Fallacy Actually” and the batch of new songs that will follow were recorded at Pachyderm Studios
outside of the band’s hometown with producer John Agnello (Kurt Vile, Alvvays, Dinosaur Jr.).
“Fallacy Actually” showcases Night Moves further evolution as a band and as songwriters, still trading in
massive pop hooks that somehow manage to convey a sense of yearning melancholy but with a sense of
maturity and perspective in the arrangements that comes with time. Synthesizers sweep, the pedal steel
swoons, the high lonesome harmonica calls across a distance.
These aren’t pandemic songs… more a bit of unfinished business that the pandemic allowed to be
fulfilled. The band and Agnello had worked together previously on the band’s second album, 2016’s
Pennied Days. That album was set to be made at Pachyderm Studios but had to be relocated when
studio owner John Kuker sadly passed away on the eve of the recording dates.
With the band restless after the campaign for their third album, Can You Really Find Me (2019), which
was prematurely cut short by COVID, they did their best to keep busy: writing songs, building
greenhouses in South Dakota for a friend, rehearsing the aforementioned songs. Out of that came a
brace of new tunes that simply called out to be documented.
The funny thing is that, for anyone that’s ever spent an inordinate amount of time in a recording studio,
the process of making an album is its own social distancing of sorts. So the notion of getting a cohort
together in the moment actually made strangely perfect sense under the circumstances.
New songs honed and selected, the band re-approached Agnello to get feedback on the material and
working together again. The idea was met with enthusiasm, and everyone converged on the idyllic,
secluded Pachyderm Studios for a hectic, bustling week of creation and homage.
VARIOUS BLONDE open.
9PM SHOW
Minneapolis-based quartet Night Moves return with the psychedelic new song “Fallacy Actually.” The
first track in a series of new singles to be released incrementally over the next year, “Fallacy Actually” is
a head-spinning swirl of layered synths, harmonica, and guitar and a fitting introduction to the band’s
next chapter.
Singer John Pelant describes the track as, “A dense cosmic romp that deals with personal fears and
letting go. The inevitable end of things, hatred versus acceptance, flawed thoughts, and what could have
been. I wanted it to have a NOVA, UFO abduction, backroom Estonian roller rink discotheque kind of
vibe. The song went through a lot of changes, styles, and moods. I think we ended up in a nice place. I
love the soft flute - makes me think of Canned Heat meets Motown meets The Spinners on acid.”
“Fallacy Actually” and the batch of new songs that will follow were recorded at Pachyderm Studios
outside of the band’s hometown with producer John Agnello (Kurt Vile, Alvvays, Dinosaur Jr.).
“Fallacy Actually” showcases Night Moves further evolution as a band and as songwriters, still trading in
massive pop hooks that somehow manage to convey a sense of yearning melancholy but with a sense of
maturity and perspective in the arrangements that comes with time. Synthesizers sweep, the pedal steel
swoons, the high lonesome harmonica calls across a distance.
These aren’t pandemic songs… more a bit of unfinished business that the pandemic allowed to be
fulfilled. The band and Agnello had worked together previously on the band’s second album, 2016’s
Pennied Days. That album was set to be made at Pachyderm Studios but had to be relocated when
studio owner John Kuker sadly passed away on the eve of the recording dates.
With the band restless after the campaign for their third album, Can You Really Find Me (2019), which
was prematurely cut short by COVID, they did their best to keep busy: writing songs, building
greenhouses in South Dakota for a friend, rehearsing the aforementioned songs. Out of that came a
brace of new tunes that simply called out to be documented.
The funny thing is that, for anyone that’s ever spent an inordinate amount of time in a recording studio,
the process of making an album is its own social distancing of sorts. So the notion of getting a cohort
together in the moment actually made strangely perfect sense under the circumstances.
New songs honed and selected, the band re-approached Agnello to get feedback on the material and
working together again. The idea was met with enthusiasm, and everyone converged on the idyllic,
secluded Pachyderm Studios for a hectic, bustling week of creation and homage.
VARIOUS BLONDE open.
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