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Listings are in the opposite order of appearance: headliner is listed at the top, next is the support band(s), and the last band listed is the opener.


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Sunday August 28 2016
 8:00PM doors -- music at 9:00PM ••• ALL AGES
$12 in advance / $14 at the door
Violent Soho
  
from Australia

www.violentsoho.com/
 Alternative rock, grunge
Meat Wave
www.facebook.com/MeatWaveChicago/
 post punk
Melted
www.facebook.com/meltedca
  pop punk surf garage rock

Violent Soho
Luke Boerdam, Luke Henery, James Tidswell, Michael Richards
-from Mansfield, Brisbane, Australia

-In the time since Violent Soho’s last U.S. performances alongside bands like The Bronx, Dinosaur Jr., Built To Spill and Alice in Chains in 2010, the band has all but wholly reinvented itself, starting with their breakout album Hungry Ghost. Released in September of 2014, Hungry Ghost peaked at #6 on the ARIA Album Chart and made a lasting impact here in the States as well, driving champions like Modern Baseball, Mark Hoppus, and members of All Time Low to sing the band’s praises.

Earlier this year, Violent Soho released their latest album called WACO, which shot straight to #1 on the ARIA Chart in its debut week. Named for the small Texas city that was the site of the Koresh-led Branch-Davidian siege in 1993, WACO is like Hungry Ghost’s older sister - while HG dealt primarily with themes of self-destruction, WACO takes many of those themes and reflects them in a way so as to question our surroundings instead.

“To know the story of Violent Soho is to understand the meaning of career peaks and troughs, of feast and famine, of getting it all, losing it all, then clawing it back through sheer determination and grit.” the Huffington Post explains.

After years of playing as a local band in Brisbane, Thurston Moore of iconic indie-rock band Sonic Youth signed Violent Soho to his Ecstatic Peace imprint. Before they knew it, the band’s career was based in Brooklyn, and more black-and-white than they had ever imagined - driving, playing a show, driving, doing an acoustic radio set, repeat. It inevitably broke the band’s spirit, sending them back to Australia for some much-needed reflection. Simply put, things were bleak. Guitarist James Tidswell, needing cash, applied for a job at a local McDonald’s. The day he arrived for his interview was the same day that Violent Soho’s self-titled sophomore album was nominated for an ARIA Award for Best Hard Rock Album. The nomination served as a light-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel for the band, and it wasn’t long before they wrote and released their breakthrough album Hungry Ghost.

In the time since Violent Soho’s last U.S. performances alongside bands like The Bronx, Dinosaur Jr., Built To Spill and Alice in Chains in 2010, the band has all but wholly reinvented itself, starting with their breakout album Hungry Ghost. Released in September of 2014, Hungry Ghost peaked at #6 on the ARIA Album Chart and made a lasting impact here in the States as well, driving champions like Modern Baseball, Mark Hoppus, and members of All Time Low to sing the band’s praises.

Earlier this year, Violent Soho released their latest album called WACO, which shot straight to #1 on the ARIA Chart in its debut week. Named for the small Texas city that was the site of the Koresh-led Branch-Davidian siege in 1993, WACO is like Hungry Ghost’s older sister - while HG dealt primarily with themes of self-destruction, WACO takes many of those themes and reflects them in a way so as to question our surroundings instead.

“To know the story of Violent Soho is to understand the meaning of career peaks and troughs, of feast and famine, of getting it all, losing it all, then clawing it back through sheer determination and grit.” the Huffington Post explains.

After years of playing as a local band in Brisbane, Thurston Moore of iconic indie-rock band Sonic Youth signed Violent Soho to his Ecstatic Peace imprint. Before they knew it, the band’s career was based in Brooklyn, and more black-and-white than they had ever imagined - driving, playing a show, driving, doing an acoustic radio set, repeat. It inevitably broke the band’s spirit, sending them back to Australia for some much-needed reflection. Simply put, things were bleak. Guitarist James Tidswell, needing cash, applied for a job at a local McDonald’s. The day he arrived for his interview was the same day that Violent Soho’s self-titled sophomore album was nominated for an ARIA Award for Best Hard Rock Album. The nomination served as a light-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel for the band, and it wasn’t long before they wrote and released their breakthrough album Hungry Ghost.




Meat Wave
Chris Sutter, Joe Gac, Ryan Wizniak
-from Chicago, IL

-Meat Wave is constantly being asked about its name, though it gets why you keep on doing it. Formed in 2011 by the trio of Chris Sutter (vocals/guitar), Joe Gac (bass), and Ryan Wizniak (drums), the three Chicago punk scene stalwarts came together and, just a year later, released its self-titled full-length, though that was never the intention.

Having signed to SideOneDummy, Meat Wave is set to release Delusion Moon, a record that works as one interlocking piece. Focusing on the lunar cycles and the concept of moon sickness, Sutter puts himself in other peoples' shoes and attempts to work through the insanity of our modern world with the band's acerbic post-punk serving as the backdrop. It's a record that's varied, versatile, and endlessly venomous, offering biting social criticism the way only Meat Wave can.



Melted
Justin E - Guitar / Vocals
Sam M - Drums
Thomas P - Bass
Chuck C - Lights
-from Corona, Californiaa

-"Melted is a surprisingly musical mixture of garbage burrito-fueled sonic mayhem that has air-kicked, screamed, and that-thing-Justin-does-where-he-shakes-like-an-epileptic-seizure-while-singing-ed across the OC punk scene.
After sleeping through the transition to adulthood, this trio of SoCal suburban burnouts woke up on the wrong side of both the 90s and the 91 freeway and immediately formed a band out of self-defense.
Melted plays belligerently rowdy speed jams while howling angst-riddled lyrics at venues as diverse as the Observatory, the Smell, and what may have been an active crime scene in a crackhouse. They plan to tour until their untimely deaths, accidentally but unapologetically offend your political agenda, and occasionally string a few notes together." - Dylan Buck