The Front Bottoms - You Are Who You Hang Out With Tour

W/ Slothrust
All Ages

About This Event

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PLEASE RIDESHARE - Parking is limited around the venue. We strongly recommend using rideshare apps like Uber or Lyft for transportation to and from the venue. There is a designated rideshare pick up / drop off location near the entrance for your convenience.

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Artist Info

The Front Bottoms
New Jersey indie rock duo the Front Bottoms emerged in the late 2000s with a wildly eclectic blend of pop, rock, and punk influences accompanied by witty lyrics that offer a rapid-fire, slightly surreal perspective on the world around them. Early releases like 2011's The Front Bottoms and 2013's Talon of the Hawk relied on lean, angular melodies, wiry guitar work, and propulsive drumming. After signing with Fueled by Ramen, the duo's production aesthetic developed a more full-bodied sound though their thematic quirks were essentially unchanged. They enjoyed greater commercial success on albums like 2017's Going Grey and 2020's In Sickness & In Flames which allowed them to continue making smaller fan-favorite releases like 2022's Theresa EP.
 
The Front Bottoms are vocalist/guitarist Brian Sella and drummer Mathew Uychich. Hailing from Bergen County, New Jersey, Sella and Uychich have been friends since they were ten years old, and started writing songs together when Sella was in sixth grade. After years of making music on their own, Sella and Uychich decided to take their act to the stage at a high school talent show, where they played an original song as well as a Modest Mouse cover. Sella's mother hoped to encourage the boys by buying them some time at a local recording studio, where they managed to record 12 songs in just three hours. With enough original songs to fill a set, the Front Bottoms were booked to play an all-ages show at a club in Pompton Lakes, New Jersey with a handful of local bands; there they met Casey Lee Morgan, who was running sound that night and recorded music in his home studio.
 
Morgan began doing sessions with the duo, and in 2008 the Front Bottoms put out a self-released album, I Hate My Friends, and hit the road, making their way up and down the East Coast and playing any makeshift venue that would have them. Another D.I.Y. album, My Grandmother vs. Pneumonia, was released in 2009, and an EP appeared in 2010. Early on in their touring exploits, Brian Uychich (Mathew's brother) joined the duo on keyboards and vocals, but he left the group in 2011 to pursue his education, and the Front Bottoms returned to a duo. In 2011, the band signed a deal with respected New Jersey independent label Bar/None Records, and their first album for their new sponsors, simply titled The Front Bottoms, was issued in September 2011. They followed it up with 2013's Talon of the Hawk, and in 2014 they released a six-song EP of previously unreleased fan favorites titled Rose, which served as the first in a series of EPs to be named after the bandmembers' grandmothers. In April 2015, they released a split-EP called Liberty and Personality with rapper GDP, followed by their third studio album, the Fueled by Ramen-issued Back on Top, in September. Over the next two years, the Front Bottoms continued to raise their profile, playing at Coachella and Austin City Limits as well as touring the U.K. with blink-182 and Frank Turner. In October 2017, they released Going Grey, their second LP for Fueled by Ramen. Ann, the second EP in the Grandmothers series, appeared the following year. In March 2019, the Front Bottoms released a split-single with singer and songwriter Kevin Devine, with the band contributing a cover of Devine's "Just Stay." Forever fascinated with the zeitgeist, their 2020 LP, In Sickness & In Flames, captured the group self-examining their continued adolescent feelings amid the anxiety of the times. Returning in 2022, the band offered up another collection of fan favorites on Theresa, the third installment in their Grandmothers EP series. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
Slothrust

Leah Wellbaum has never been afraid of her own humility or honesty. But she’s never quite examined it the way she has now with Parallel Timeline. On Slothrust’s latest album, bandleader Leah
Wellbaum pushed herself to try and understand her own spirituality on a deeper level, putting a lens on the core wound of the human experience, the idea that we’re alone. With Parallel Timeline, Wellbaum explores the feeling of being trapped inside her own consciousness while simultaneously searching for a meaningful connection to the universe, and all the mysteries it contains.


During the writing process, Wellbaum sought to connect with her inner child - a voice that allows ideas to flow freely and without censorship. Ultimately, it allowed her to find poetic catharsis. The album’s artwork and visuals reflect that ethos as well. For her, inverted colored rainbows and orbs became a gateway to exploring the illusory things we see and experience in everyday life. The iconography of this record explores the space where science and the whimsical intersect, and where the unfamiliar becomes hardly recognizable. She is a strong believer that nothing is quite as it seems, and that a greater reality exists beyond what the human eye can see.