Slothrust Announce Second Leg of ‘Of Course You Did’ Anniversary Tour, Tickets On Sale Fri 1/19 (10 AM Local) ‘I Promise’ EP Out Now via Dangerbird

Photo by Marcelo Mayen

SEE SLOTHRUST LIVE: Tickets

LISTEN/PURCHASE & SHARE: Slothrust – I Promise EP
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LISTEN/WATCH & SHARE: Slothrust – “Maybe Maybe”
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LISTEN/WATCH & SHARE: Slothrust – “Pony”
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Slothrust — the duo composed of principal songwriter, guitar player, and unrepentant aesthete Leah Wellbaum and drummer Will Gorin — recently unveiled their brand new EP entitledI Promise, out now via Dangerbird Records.

A key part of the tracklisting is the band’s standout cover of Ginuwine’s “Pony,” on which they shamelessly wield and respect the track’s raunchy nature and punch it up with a sludgy musicality, praised by outlets such as BillboardConsequence, and Stereogum, and additionally added to the official Spotify ‘Rock Covers’ playlist.

In addition to their new EP release, Slothrust is about to embark on a tour in celebration of the 10-Year Anniversary of their release, Of Course You Do. Today, the duo announces a second leg of the tour, with continued support from Weakened Friends (tickets on sale Friday, January 19 at 10 AM Local).View the full list of dates below and find more information HERE.

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“I love secrets hidden in plain sight,” says Slothrust guitarist, singer and songwriter Leah Wellbaum. Approaching a decade since their fiercely innovative debut, Wellbaum and drummer/percussionist Will Gorin search for the keys to secrets with Slothrust as they pick at the locks of guitar rock, moving it forward with an expansive and unconventional lean. The new EP I Promise is centered around a sly, thunderous take on the 90s R&B freakytime classic Ginuwine’s “Pony” and two new singles “Maybe Maybe” and “Magic Glow.” The band’s rendition of “Pony” was released earlier this summer with an accompanying music video, and is followed by focus track “Maybe Maybe” today. With “Pony,” Wellbaum and Gorin take Timbaland’s iconic beat and Ginuwine’s carnal a cappella and build a whole new world around the original’s three powerhouse chords and effervescent low end. Slothrust’s version swings like a lithe slice of sludgy rock ‘n’ roll and is a revelatory venn diagram of best ‘90s nostalgia and forward-looking celebration of the now. “I feel like we have developed our own unique sound to the point where we can ask ourselves ‘what would Slothrust do?’” says Gorin. “The paradox being that if we knew, Slothrust would do the opposite.” The two new originals, “Maybe Maybe” and “Magic Glow,” which feature Gorin on drums and bass for the first time, are anchored by Welbaum’s manic guitar melodies and meaty hooks. Slothrust’s subversive pop instincts shine with lyrical nods to liminal spaces, ceremonial magick, and ecosexuality. “Will and I have been playing different genres of music in different configurations together for almost 15 years now and that is a big part of our lock,” says Wellbaum. “We know how to work with each other in a variety of different settings and how to communicate outside of what we do specifically. That offers us tremendous freedom.” Speaking of freedom, a prickly instrumental performance of “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” recasts the Wizard of Oz standard as raw off-Broadway punk, but it’s the extended version of “Pony” that snaps necks. Clocking in at fourteen-plus minutes, Slothrust dives straight off the deep end with seared guitar solos and pulse-quickening drum patterns that pay homage to the original while showcasing the pair’s strengths as groove-locked explorers at the peak of their powers. “It’s always fun to leave space in the music where improvisation is possible,” explains Wellbaum, “and that is part of what is so exciting to us about the extended version of ‘Pony’; it’s entirely improvised, and we only did one performance of it in the studio.” Slothrust announced themselves as rewarding and fearless interpreters with their 2016 EP, Show Me How You Want It to Be. Tackling material as diverse and unexpected as their libidinous romp thru Britney Spears’ “…Baby One More Time” and a grungy, sand-blasted rethink of Marcy Playground (“Sex and Candy”), their version of The Turtles “Happy Together” was a revelation that flipped that song’s famously delusional narrative voice and breezy pop sound into a roaring articulation of objectified rage. The full-length I Promise EP is out now via Dangerbird Records. Stay tuned for more from Slothrust, coming soon.