3/21/2023

Worriers share new single "Never Quite Kicks In" w/official video

WORRIERS SHARE NEW TRACK & VIDEO “NEVER QUITE KICKS IN”


LOS ANGELES-BASED PROJECT FROM SINGER/SONGWRITER

LAUREN DENITZIO SHARES A PREVIEW FROM

INTIMATE, SELF-RECORDED COLLECTION

WITH CONTRIBUTIONS FROM DRUMMER ATOM WILLARD 

(AGAINST ME!, SOCIAL DISTORTION)


EAST COAST TOUR DATES WITH NEW TOURING LINEUP BEGIN NEXT MONTH


WARM BLANKET DUE APRIL 7 VIA ERNEST JENNING RECORD CO.


RIYL: MAGNETIC FIELDS, FRANKIE COSMOS, GIRLPOOL,

GUIDED BY VOICES, WAXAHATCHEE

“[Worriers] can take a few power chords and cuttingly tender words and make them blossom,

wilt and explode, often in the same song.”

“[Worriers] bring a startling wryness to their anger, politically engaged

but also painfully intimate.”

“…here to challenge norms, to defeat the despicable.”

“…makes surviving sound like thriving.”

Today, Worriers – the acclaimed Los Angeles, CA-based project helmed by singer/songwriter Lauren Denitzio – share the new track “Never Quite Kicks In” from their fourth album Warm Blanket, due April 7, 2023 via Ernest Jenning Record Co. The band will embark on their east coast tour next month with a new touring lineup, which includes Atom Willard (drums), Dominic Angelella (bass), and Frank Piegaro (guitar). See below for the full list of dates, all of which feature support from Lizdelise.


“I think about toxic positivity a lot, and how that seeps into the popularization of chillwave and mood playlists where everything sounds as unconfrontational and escapist as possible,” Denitzio says. “I'm all for a good nostalgia trip but nothing gets me twitchy like apathy and a too-cool-for-school attitude. I wanted to make something that reminded me of the indie songs I grew up on that could talk about something more significant while sounding fun and maybe a little bit silly. Some friends and I shot the video in a few hours at a dilapidated office space near LAX, trying to illustrate the self-deluded types I'm singing about.” 


Last month, Worriers shared the chillwave indie-skewering track “Prepared to Forget,” which followed closely behind the album’s announcement with the stirring, atypically synth-laden track “Pollen In The Air.” The track was accompanied by an official lyric video and was praised by the likes of StereogumBrooklynVegan and more. 


LISTEN TO “NEVER QUITE KICKS IN”

WATCH “NEVER QUITE KICKS IN” OFFICIAL VIDEO

PRE-ORDER WARM BLANKET

Lauren Denitzio has always been the type of songwriter to say exactly what’s on their mind. Over the course of the past decade with their band Worriers, they’ve addressed gender liberation, capitalist violence, and searing heartbreak, all over the band’s signature style of triumphant chords and subtle pop sensibilities. Worriers was always a band that shined with the feelings of ecstatic potential; offering a sense of liberation amidst the chaos of the world.  


And yet, on their newest album Warm Blanket, they’ve never sounded more free. 



The band’s fourth full length record has the feel of an exciting debut and there’s a reason: it marks the first time that Denitzio accepted that the group they had been trying to treat as a band is actually a solo project. After a pace of touring and recording that would be breakneck for most, but de rigueur in the underground scene which forged them, Denitzio found themselves in the summer of 2022 with a chance to finally catch their breath. “I realized I could write whatever I wanted.”


The DIY ethic that Denitzio developed on a thousand punk tours, playing squats, house parties and rowdy warehouses is never far from their mode of operation. And so—with no proper training in audio recording—they recorded and mixed the entirety of Warm Blanket at home. Atom Willard (Against Me!, Social Distortion) contributed drums remotely, adding an orchestral element of weight and emphasis to the proceedings. 


The result is a collection of songs that reflects Denitizio “unlearning the expectations of being in a band” and writing music “that’s more in line with my actual influences.” Written during a particularly fertile creative period—Denitzio had already completed an entirely separate new album to be released later—Warm Blanket marked a chance to write the kind of songs they had always appreciated but were unsure of how to place in the Worriers catalog. 


The album reveals a songwriter tossing off former constrictions, giving themselves the space and time to properly reflect on all they’ve learned. There’s a somber yet tender unpacking of the past; songs littered with mix tapes, motorola phones, Brooklyn bars in their heyday, house shows, broken bikes and doomed love. 


On “Prepared to Forget,” Denitzio delivers an aching paean to the time when they had friends who still thought they could get away with anything; even the most self-destructive things. 


And lest you think their signature critical edge has dulled, “Never Kicks In”—which functions as a sonic tribute to the Magnetic Fields—offers a biting send-up of Denitzio’s non-committal musical peers who seem to perpetually coast by on doing the bare minimum for their art. 


There’s also a new tenderness at work in their writing, perhaps best seen on “Pollen in the Air,” which sees them literally sprawling out all over the landscape declaring: “we could be anywhere,” marking the terms of their new perspective.


The album finds Denitzio as a vigilante seeking revenge, a lover ready to be hurt and a weary traveler, meditating on heartache and loss, all while wanting to continue the beautiful, exhausting struggle. 


In short, they are anyone they want to be. 


Few bands have the luxury of writing a first album a decade into their discography. But for Worriers, Warm Blanket is exactly that: a staggering debut from a songwriter who is just getting started.


WORRIERS

ON TOUR 2023


April 5 - Washington, DC @ Comet Ping Pong

April 6 - Philadelphia, PA @ Johnny Brenda's

April 7 - Providence, RI @ Fete Music Hall

April 8 - Boston, MA @ Faces Brewing Co.

April 9 - Brooklyn, NY @ TV Eye

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AGAPE LODGE POETRY SOCIETY November 17th 2024 @ Ultrasound Studios DTLA

All photos taken by Martin Worster