Queen City Sounds Podcast S5E24: Cloakroom

Cloakroom, photo by Vin Romero

Cloakroom is a shoegaze band from Northwest Indiana that got off the ground in 2012. The group’s association with heavy bands since its inception is fitting since it’s own crafting of atmospheric rock has built into it a physicality of tone that is as electrifying as it is weighty. In moments it’s like hearing Holy Mountain-period Sleep working with Fantastic Planet-era Failure in how the sounds can sound like they’re cutting through time and space and immersively transporting at once. This quality was in high form on the 2022 album Dissolution Wave, a concept album about saving the human race from a phenomenon that threatens to wipe out humanity’s art and abstract thought. In 2025 Cloakroom issued its latest album Last Leg of the Human Table, an effort that showcases the band proving itself capable of writing whatever style it wishes without losing its essence of creating entrancing atmospheres. It is also evidence of the band’s gift for pop songcraft and memorable melodies. For years Cloakroom has been one of the bands of choice for connoisseurs of modern shoegaze.

Listen to our interview with bassist Bobby Markos of Cloakroom on Bandcamp and follow the outfit at the links below. Cloakroom performs at the Hi-Dive on Sunday, August 24, 2025 as the headlining act of the final night of Ghost Canyon Fest.

Cloakroom on Instagram

lastlegofthehumantable.com

Cloakroom on Bandcamp

Queen City Sounds Podcast S5E23: Buildings

Buildings, photo by Bronson Karaff

Buildings is a trio from Minneapolis that spawned in around 2006. Over the next decade the group gained a bit of a cult following in underground circles among those that appreciate the kind of challenging but thrilling noise rock one heard out of labels like Amphetamine Reptile and Touch and Go. Buildings seemed to learn further into the chaos and industrial aspects of that music and by the time of its 2017 album You Are Not One Of Us there was a touch of ambient tonality in the songwriting like a band that wouldn’t have been out of place on the GSL imprint or a more brutal version of a later era Butthole Surfers record. The experimental streak continued with the 2019 album Negative Sound. With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic the band drifted apart some and the demands of adulthood meant operating full time as a band wasn’t as possible as previously. Drummer Travis Kuhlman and bassist Mike Baillie formed DUG and have enjoyed some success as darlings of modern noise rock. But in 2024 members of the band including vocalist/guitarist Brian Lake started hanging out again as friends do and Buildings became a going concern again playing its first public show at the Caterwaul festival, the flagship noise rock festival in the country, in 2025.

Listen to our interview with Brian Lake on Bandcamp and follow Buildings at the links below. Buildings performs at Ghost Canyon Fest on Sunday, August 24, 2025.

Buildings on Facebook

Buildings on Instagram

Queen City Sounds Brief Guide to Ghost Canyon Fest

Ghost Canyon Fest, Denver’s DIY music fest showcasing left field music of various stripes, runs August 21-24, 2025 at venues in Colorado Springs in Denver and here is our modest rundown of what’s in store each day. For more information and to purchase tickets please visit ghostcanyonfest.com.

Church Fire, photo by Amanda Gostomski

Th 08/21/25 What’s Left Records doors 7 PM

Scorplings
Noise rock jazz post-punk collage post-pop. If you’re into both Yo La Tengo and Shellac you’ve come to the right band.

Silver West
Tender cosmic folk avant-country psychedelia.

Viewfinder
Indie emogaze tapped into healing the bruised psyche of those crushed under wheels of the failed American dream.

Church Fire
“Equal parts industrial synth pop, hyperkinetic dance punk and dreamlike ambient 8-bit EDM doom.” Also with the new lighting rig like a revolutionary dance party every show.

Viewfinder, photo from Bandcamp

F 08/22/25 Wax Trax 3 PM (free show)
The Destructor’s Club
New York dub post-punk aimed at rattling Babylon to dust.

Denver Vintage Reggae Society
Veteran DJ crew bringing the legit reggae sides to liven up a late summer sidewalk.

The Milk Blossoms, photo by Tom Murphy

F 08/22/25 Skylark Lounge doors 7 PM
Safekeeper
Maximalist lo-fi slacker rock from Fort Collins for fans of early Built to Spill and Jonathan Donohue-era Flaming Lips.

Honduh Daze
Where harsh noise, post-punk and Situationist-esque anti-commercial culture humor intersect.

The Milk Blossoms
Dream folk indie pop poetic portraits of collages of dreams, heartfelt memories and aspirational futures yet manifest.

Neptune
A mini-chamber orchestra of industrial post-punk assembled from found objects and repurposed instruments, the stylistic offspring of Neubauten, Lightning Bolt and Caroliner Rainbow.

Pink Lady Monster
Retro-futurist No Wave funk disco post-punk performance art like a soundtrack to a Pat Cadigan cyberpunk novel filled with a playful joy and sly culture jamming.

Pink Lady Monster, photo by Tom Murphy
Fuubutsushi (includes Patrick Shiroishi and Chaz Prymek), photo courtesy the artists

S 08/23/25 Mutiny Information Cafe doors 1 PM
Flesh Tape
Swirling emogaze as noisy exorcisms of isolation and heartache.

Progmistress
The solo stylings of Dreadnought and BleakHeart vocalist and keyboard wizard Kelly Schilling.

Nguyen, Prymek, Shiroishi
Free jazz Zen mystics with a gift for creating transcendent spaces of expansive textures.

Flowting Clowds
A cause of celebration because Jeff Mueller and Sean Meadows of June of 44 fame performing the new they’ve been working on for over a decade.

MJ Guider, photo from Bandcamp

S 8/23/25 Hi-Dive doors 6 PM
El Welk
Psychedelic garage Americana punk from former members of country post-punk band Snakes.

Cougars
Atonal mutant sleaze rock like the musical equivalent of early 80s National Lampoon and Mad Magazine.

Suicide Cages
Seething post-hardcore exorcisms of our internalized collective social nightmares.

Latter
Deeply personal, raging songs scorching civilizational neglect and the abuses it spawns.

MJ Guider
Abstract shoegaze drone emanating from the primeval places in the dreamtime.

Still House Plants
Iterative, cinematic guitar and soulful-vocal-driven avant-post-punk and R&B fusion.

Black Eyes
The equally weird and wonderfully disorienting, Can-esque DC cousin to The Rapture.

Black Eyes, photo from Bandcamp
DUG, photo from Bandcamp

Su 8/24/25 Wax Trax 1 PM free show
Moon Pussy
Electo-convulsive noise rock and absurdist-conscious poetry set to broken jackhammer beats.

DUG
Smash punk irreverence and doom’s complete lack of regard for melody, remove the aggression and you have this band’s ability to channel the crushing bleakness of the world into inspiration.

Big’N
Jagged shocks of despair survived and carved into seething stabbing sounds pushed through a groove.

Museum of Light, photo from Bandcamp

Su 8/24/25 Hi-Dive doors 4 PM
American Motors
Navigating gritty distortion and dreamlike shimmery melodies this band catalogs the haunted corridors of America’s decaying empire and fractured dreams.

Precocious Neophyte
Bittersweet bedroom shoegaze awash in fading neon lights and lingering nostalgic warmth.

Museum of Light
The new incarnation of the band indulges its gift for crushing heaviness alongside exquisitely transcendent atmospheric ambient explorations into inner space.

Evicshen
A prime experimenter in combining the aesthetics of sound, visual representation and tactile elements in crafting unique artistic experiences.

Buildings
Industrial math noise thrash with deep passages of introspective tension before the unhinged uncoiling of the pent up angst.

Glassing
Euphorically relentless post-black metal screamo.

Cloakroom
Fuzzy, shimmery, majestic space pop stoner rock stories of everyday life in the fragile and perilous present.

Queen City Sounds Podcast S5E22: Latter

Latter, photo by Vanessa Valadez

Latter is an experimental noise rock band from Chicago with vocalist Meredith Haines and drummer Jon Alvarado at its core. The project came about when Haines moved from Philadelphia to go to graduate school and wanted to start a heavier and more confrontational kind of band and Alvarado, a member of indie pop band Beach Bunny, aimed to join something more aggressive. Originally a four piece before songs cohered the fledgling group shrank to a duo and named itself Latter. The new lineup quickly developed songs and recorded its 2024 debut album the raw and confrontational My Body Is My Sickness, an album that skewers abuse, offers incisive self-examination and exults in bold vulnerability. The album was recently reissued on vinyl following the release of the 2025 EP What Lives Inside Me, a set of songs that sets fire to misogyny and the ways culture and capitalist civilization seems to render everyone disposable in various ways. It’s gloriously ferocious noisy post-hardcore awash in caustic distortion yet not without an undercurrent of melancholic atmosphere in moments. In Spring 2025 Latter went viral when Haines shared a live version of “I Don’t Owe You” on TikTok seeming to tapped in to an experience many have shared in the aftermath of a toxic relationship by articulating those feelings with poetic precision.

Listen to our interview with Meredith Haines and Jon Alvarado of Latter on Bandcamp and follow the band at the links below. See Latter at the Ghost Canyon Fest in Denver, Colorado at the Hi-Dive on Saturday, August 23, 2025.

latterband.com

Latter on Bandcamp

Latter on Instagram

Latter on Facebook

Latter on TikTok

Reiyo The Giant’s Hyper Pop Song “The Show Must Go On” is Otherworldly Downtempo for Fans of Glitchcore

Reiyo The Giant, photo courtesy the artist

Reiyo The Giant demonstrates a facility with delicate yet soulful vocal power on “The Show Must Go On.” The song begins like a post-Crystal Castles hyper pop song that flows into being carried hefty, big beat rhythms. But the arrangement of the song deftly drops off all low end so that the unconventional melody commands with its drift through nearly silence like the moon rapidly progressing through the sky. But the irresistible rhythm returns to accent the end of the song as it slows down into a paradoxically rapid chillout into silence. It’s the kind of song that at 3 minutes one second feels too short yet takes the listener through a full emotional arc of exuberance and post-performance tranquility. Listen to “The Show Must Go On’ on YouTube and follow Reiyo The Giant at the links below.

Reiyo The Giant on Instagram

Cartamira’s Downtempo Synth Pop Single “Look at Me” Captures the Yearning Hopefulness of Unrequited Love

Cartamira, photo courtesy the artist

Cartamira’s “Look at Me” is a downtempo pop song about unrequited love and yearning. In evoking these feelings it captures the emotional intensity of that headspace and how you can feel like you’re perpetually in an unresolved dream and sitting between hopeful and resigned melancholy. Musically the song utilizes light dance beats and luminous and lush melodic, lingering chords to frame vocals processed to be slightly out of phase with everyday reality. It enhances the sense of floating between fascination and a blind hope for connection and recognition that may or may not manifest. Watch the video for “Look at Me” on YouTube and follow the Italian experimental pop project Cartamira at the links provided.

Cartamira on Apple Music

Cartamira on Facebook

Cartamira on Instagram

Cartamira on Bandcamp

Queen City Sounds Podcase S5E21: Suicide Cages

Suicide Cages, photo by Ethan Cook

Suicide Cages is a band from Denver whose sound draws on various strands of heavy music and punk into a seething maelstrom of channeled outrage and raw emotion. More less a product of the social and civilizational wrecking ball of the COVID-19 pandemic, Suicide Cages came together among friends who knew each other prior and finally came together for a project that could express ideas about society, culture and the fragility of life with focus and integrity. Some might hear the music and take away that it’s an imaginative take on math-y metalcore with the kind of momentum and controlled chaos that that music manifests so well. But anyone that takes a listen to the group’s new EP Live Without there is a lot of pain and despair given air and room to breath and to let it drift some out of the psyche through the sheer release of performance and for the audience sharing in the energy of those moments. Suicide Cages also refreshingly and explicitly, according to its Bandcamp page, “stands against white supremacy in all its forms.” It’s a stance that has become increasingly brave with the rise of racist fascism and all that descends therefrom.

Listen to our interview with Devin Rombough and Mhyk Monroe of Suicide Cages on Bandcamp and follow the band at the links below.

Suicide Cages on Instagram

Suicide Cages on Twitter

Suicide Cages on Facebook

Suicide Cages on Bandcamp

Queen City Sounds Podcast S5E20: Scorplings

Scorplings, photo by Tom Murphy

Scorplings is a noise rock/post-punk trio from Denver that started in 2023. The group quickly wrote and recorded demos it uploaded to Bandcamp beginning in June 2024. Along with its subsequent demos it was recorded at Scorplings’ rehearsal space and studio the Spaghetti Warehouse The band jokes about how its members met via music classified ads and longtime Denver indie rock musician and songwriter Bryon Parker (Accordion Crimes, Raleigh, Simulators) seemed to find his future bandmates out of a mutual interest in math-y post-rock band Slint as well as like-minded artists. Andres had recently moved from Los Angeles and drummer Dan had come to Denver from Chicago while Parker from the East Coast in the early 2000s but all finding a community in Denver for a type of left field punk rooted in jazz and angular song structures. At the same time one hears an instinct for informal atmospheric elements in the vein of a slowcore band and the unconventional pop song structures and melodies reminiscent of Yo La Tengo. There is a cinematic aspect to the songwriting like it’s inspired by the pacing and dynamics of classic movies. Fans of classic Chicago noise rock and DC post-punk will find a great deal to appreciate about Scorplings’ core sound.

Listen to our interview with Scorplings on Bandcamp and follow Scorplings on Instagram. Catch them live at Ghost Canyon Fest on the first night, Thursday, August 21 at What’s Left Records in Colorado Springs.

lylyn’s IDM Single “4m Hiero” Flows From Digital to Analog Sounds and Back in its Sparkling Evocation of Joy

lynlyn, photo courtesy the artist

“4m Hiero” sounds like something constantly unfolding in chapters. On this track lynlyn seems to cernter each section around a tone that expands and blossoms carried by finely accented rhythms. The song slowly accelerates and then pulls back to passages with an aspect of reflection, floating without the rhythm propelling the atmospherics forward, allowed to drift in space. In the video companion we see the visual representation of this with images more rounded before the rhythm reasserts itself in the end into a more angular, digital representation although like a fractal that freely dissolves and takes on coherence to match the beat. By the song’s end it all fades to a restful abstraction. The song is part of lylyn’s new IDM-adjacent album Ixona due out September 5, 2025 on digital, CD and LP. Watch the video for “4m Hiero” on YouTube and follow lynlyn at the links below.

lynlyn on Instagram

lynlyn on Bandcamp

S.C.A.B.’s Warmly Melancholic “4th of July” is a Song About Lingering and Unresolved Affection

S.C.A.B., photo courtesy the artists

S.C.A.B. seems to be in a mode of writing songs about complex and nuanced moments in relationships. Its single “4th of July” has melancholic yet warm, splayed, expanding guitar work with each riff trailing off before repeating like a persistent lingering memory of someone that unravels into an unresolved moment in the end. It’s a perfect dynamic for capturing the essence of a relationship that feels so intense and close in moments but in which each person withdraws even as they yearn for each other because the connection seems so special. The song’s conclusion actually leaves you wondering how the story ends. Listen to “4th of July” on YouTube and follow S.C.A.B. at the links provided.

S.C.A.B. on Twitter

S.C.A.B. on Facebook

S.C.A.B. on Instagram

S.C.A.B. on Bandcamp