Queen City Sounds Podcast S6E01: Low Cut Connie

Danny Clinch photographing Low Cut Connie on December 21st 2025 in Asbury Park New Jersey.

Low Cut Connie is a rock and roll band based out of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The group fronted by singer, pianist and songwriter Adam Weiner began in 2010 as a way to manifest his songs as a dynamic live act. Prior to Low Cut Connie Weiner was mainly a solo artist who played piano and sang in bars of all stripes, restaurants, honky tonks, warehouses, anarchist squats, DIY spaces and all manner of places where the opportunity presented itself. By the time an actual band came into the picture Weiner had honed his stagecraft and command of an audience from thousands of hours of getting in front of not always receptive audiences. The 2010 debut Low Cut Connie album Get Out the Lotion, despite being recorded in original guitarist Neil Duncan’s garage in Florida in just four days, had a captivating immediacy and freshness that garnered critical acclaim from the likes of Robert Christgau (writing for MSN rather than Village Voice at the time), Ken Tucker of NPR and Merrill Garbus (Tune-Yards).

Across subsequent albums Weiner’s songwriting built upon an ability to express stories and situations about the lived experiences of real people as they are, not overly romanticized, and discerning and vividly articulating an essence of the human condition that anyone hearing the song and witnessing it live could immediately identify. A Low Cut Connie video typically has people in it that might look cool but aren’t necessarily fitting a Hollywood archetype and simply the kind of people you run into every day and showcasing their inherent grace and dignity even if a particular song is about an aspect of life that isn’t the most fun. There is an emotional honesty to a Low Cut Connie song that draws you in and perhaps get you to dance. The style draws some inspiration from the likes of Sly & The Family Stone and Aretha Franklin and their gift for insightful social commentary inside an undeniably moving and exuberant bit of music as well as early rock and roll and infused with a touch of punk spirit and charismatic stage presence. The music combines high energy with raw vulnerability and compassion showing how that combination can not just be exciting but cathartic and good for the soul.

Over the years Low Cut Connie has garnered attention from public figures and high profile musicians such as Barack Obama, Bruce Springsteen, Elton John, Howard Stern and Nick Hornby. Obama included the track “Boozophilia” (from the 2012 album Call Me Sylvia) on his Summer Spotify playlist for 2015. Since then the group has released a handful of critically acclaimed albums, been featured on television, performed at festivals like Newport Folk Festival, Bonnaroo and Pickathon and otherwise built a devoted cult following and expanding collaborative work and recordings. Then on February 13, 2025 Weiner put out a statement about canceling the band’s scheduled March 19, 2025 performance at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in response to President Trump’s takeover of the institution. The invite to perform had been extended prior but the newly re-elected president’s legacy and policies promoting racism, hate generally and authoritarianism was and is antithetical to even the conceit of human decency much less the diversity of the band’s fanbase. Other artists canceled their own performances and otherwise resigned from the Center’s board of artistic advisors. That may Low Cut Connie released the acoustic version of the single “Livin’ in the USA,” a song that didn’t have explicitly topical references but the music video and the sentiments of the song seemed to be a critique of the Trump administration’s radical immigration policies and the illegal and unconstitutional actions of ICE throughout the country not to mention talk even in the previous administration of stripping legal immigrants of their citizenship status. And by extension that being something that could be done to anyone that dared to oppose the Trump regime. The song got Weiner threats online of violence and death thus vindicating the song’s message completely.

In February 2026 Low Cut Connie released the electric version of “Livin’ in the USA” as a peek into the forthcoming 8th studio album Livin’ in the USA out July 3, 2026. The album itself is a vivid set of snapshots into the American character and psyche. At a time when it feels like things are falling apart and on the verge of collapse, this new set of songs sees past the divisions without ignoring sources of conflict and despair and keys in on the hope inherent to being weary of things being desperate in a climate of ambient chaos, menace and oppression. Throughout the ten songs we hear stories of human connection and the ways in which we can alienate ourselves from others and from our own hearts. It doesn’t necessarily offer solutions but offers resonant emotional truth in a time when we are bombarded by lies and misinformation by not just the president but the oligarch/technocrat-captured media and social media. It’s a record the reminds us that analog human experience is our best hope for liberation from the perils of the current era.

Listen to our interview with Adam Weiner of Low Cut Connie on Bandcamp and follow the band at the links below. They will perform three shows in Colorado this summer. Beginning in Snowmass on Thursday, June 25, 2026 for the town’s free concert series, in Fort Collins at the Aggie Theatre on Friday June 26, 2026 with J. Roddy & The Automatic Band and The Patti Fiasco and on Saturday, June 27, 2026 at The Bluebird Theater with Queen Frog.

lowcutconnie.com

Low Cut Connie on Facebook

Low Cut Connie on Instagram