8/21/2019

SWERVEDRIVER ANNOUNCE FALL TOUR / RELEASING DIGITAL SINGLE FOR RECORD STORE DAY 9/13

SWERVEDRIVER ANNOUNCE FALL TOUR BEGINNING OCTOBER 10TH
TICKETS ON SALE AUGUST 23RD AT 10AM LOCAL TIME
 
RELEASE NEW DIGITAL EP 'REFLECTIONS' B/W 'I THINK I'M GOING TO FEEL BETTER'
FEATURES SPACE ROCK TAKES ON THE SUPREMES AND GENE CLARK CLASSICS
AVAILABLE THROUGH DANGERBIRD RECORDS SEPTEMBER 13TH
 
 'FUTURE RUINS' ALBUM AVAILABLE NOW

Photo: Steve Gullick
  
TOUR DATES:
October 10 San Diego, CA Casbah
October 11 Phoenix, AZ Valley Bar
October 13 Dallas, TX Dada
October 14 Austin, TX Empire Control Room
October 16 Atlanta, GA Hell
October 17 Nashville, TN Mercy Lounge
October 18 Carrboro, NC Cat's Cradle
October 19 Washingon, D.C. Rock & Roll Hotel
October 20 Pittsburgh, PA Spirit Hall
October 21 Philadelphia, PA Milkboy
October 22 New York, New York (Le) Poisson Rouge
October 23 Asbury Park, NJ House Of Independents
October 24 Boston, MA Sonia
October 27 Detroit, MI El Club
October 28 Chicago, IL Bottom Lounge (REACT)
October 30 Denver, CO Bluebird
November 3 Seattle, WA Columbia City Theatre
November 5 San Francisco, CA Slim's
November 6 Los Angeles, CA Teragam Ballroom

 
Press for Future Ruins:
 
"...consistently good, through and through, a reliably strong record from a band that, more than most, still sounds like no one but itself." AV Club
 
"...the post-grunge guitar heroes are back with more music for driving really, really fast.... Yeah, it's that good." Flood
 
"More than 30 years on from their inception, Swervedriver still invokes a sense of seemingly infinite permutations of meaning in their music, each with the capacity to inspire true belief." Slant
 
“Future Ruins pushes the envelope beyond expectations or indeed, any specific genre……a welcome addition to the Swervedriver canon. It also fully confirms their reunion was anything but a nostalgia trip.” Under The Radar
 
“Whether or not Future Ruins is the record that finally breaks Swervedriver through to the masses, it shows the band are still making their own breakthroughs.” PopMatters
 
“…these songs document the ongoing and confident rejuvenation of a band thoroughly enjoying their second wind. I sincerely hope that they can keep this positive trend going in the future.” Everything Is Noise
 
"If you ever liked Swervedriver, you’ll like this a lot..." Dusted
 
“Future Ruins pulls off a canny trick, perfectly channeling their past while making sense in the present” MOJO
 
“... co-founders Adam Franklin and Jimmy Hartridge venture beyond the template of Raise and Mezcal Head without making the faithful worry they’ve ditched their distortion pedals” Uncut
 
“[Future Ruins] shows that the band still have something to say and prove. They’re in it for the long haul” DIY
 
"Magical and stirring" When The Sun Hits
 
Across the four-album arc of their first era – Raise (1991); Mezcal Head (1993); Ejector Seat Reservation (1995); 99th Dream (1997), Swervedriver made music that was all about the journey....simulating the thrill of propulsion, the euphoric arrival, the anticipation of going back again (or not)…of moving on. And move on they did. During 10 years in absentia, the band’s legend grew. In 2005, a two-disc anthology was compiled with the band’s involvement, and foretold a resurrection. Sure enough, the trip resumed in 2008, with Swervedriver encountering the acclaim they ought to have enjoyed a decade earlier. A fifth albumI Wasn’t Born To Lose You, emerged in 2015, a mere 17 years after its predecessor, and trumpeted some eternal Swervedriver virtues: the intricate, fissile guitar patterns of Adam Franklin and Jimmy Hartridge, baked hard, then dispatched in giant monolithic waves by the tactile rhythm section. Their most recent full-length, Future Ruins, released in January of this year to critical acclaim, exhibited the band's fabled widescreen escapism, combined with very real fears of the modern condition...a band moving with real time/real life vitality, as well as showcasing new tricks along with classic hallmarks.
 

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PHANTOGRAM @ HOB anaheim 01.16.25 // THE PORTABLE INFINITE

All photos taken by Martin Worster