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Balance & Composure
- ALL AGES
- Goldenvoice Presents:
Doors 7:00pm
When and where
Date and time
Saturday, June 24 · 8 - 11pm PDT.
Location
The Glass House 200 West 2nd St Pomona, CA 91766
Performers
Headliners
- Balance And Composure
More Performers
- Death Bells
- Seahaven
Refund Policy
About this event
Light We Made, which was produced by Will Yip (Nothing, Pity Sex), marks a milestone for the band, as this time around they’ve toned down their hardcore and punk-rock roots, to present a body of work that is dominated by soothing, harmonic tracks. The LP’s coherent mood of transcendent moments are driven by the band experimenting with new sonic elements - weaving in dreamy synth chords, melodic guitar riffs, and atmospheric bass grooves and drum beats to hit home the delivery of the songs’ emotional lyrics.
“This album is the culmination of the last 3 years, and how musically the band wanted to be more creative than ever before. We took time off to experience life, pushing ourselves to try things that we previously hadn’t, which in return inspired us to record something that would stand out. This LP is a sonic progression for us, and we’re excited to share it with everyone.”
In support of the new LP, Balance and Composure will bring their live set on the road this Fall for a North American headline tour, plus will make an appearance at this year’s Riot Fest in Chicago, and will open for Hum on September 24th in Pomona, CA.
Adopting a collaborative approach for the recording of their third album, Death Bells have returned Between Here & Everywhere, an effort that captures the cross-section of Southern California’s shadowy hidden interzones, outside of the lights and luxury.
The record features nine new songs that represent Will Canning and Remy Veselis’ continual growth, as well as accompaniment by an experienced cast of contributors on keys, strings, piano, and operatic backup vocals. Recorded with Colin Knight at Paradise Studios, and mixed by Mike Kriebel at Golden Beat, Between Here & Everywhere bristles with immediacy and emotion, with every element tactile, balanced, and elevated.
There was a time when it looked like Seahaven might never make music again.
The sonic leap from 2011’s cathartic, gritty debut LP Winter Forever to 2014’s Reverie Lagoon: Music For Escapism Only — a wondrous sequence of nocturnal, fireside soundscapes — turned heads through the underground. But it left Torrance, California’s foremost musical shape-shifters with an almost impossible act to follow. Shows became sporadic. Heading into 2020, it had been over half a decade since the quartet released its previous album. Fans feared it was all over. For Seahaven themselves, it sometimes felt that way, too.
“I don’t even know if I picked up a guitar for two and a half years,” admits frontperson Kyle Soto. Chat with the members of Seahaven — Soto, guitarist Cody Christian, bassist Mike DeBartolo, and drummer Eric Findlay — and they’ll refer to this as their “dark period,” a time in which they scrapped an album’s worth of demos, adjourned an ongoing label search, and resigned to the possibility of Reverie Lagoon riding off into the sunset as their unintended swan song. “We didn’t know what direction we wanted to go in. We did a summer tour in 2016 and when it was over, we thought that was the end.”
Enter Halo of Hurt — Seahaven’s first album in six years and a riveting new chapter in their ongoing evolution. Astral and eerie, moonlit and menacing, Halo of Hurt reignites the magic dust that made Seahaven’s early 2010s run so special. It’s an adventurous rock album that urges you to grapple with your self doubt and innermost demons, then cast them into oblivion. “In Halo of Hurt, there’s some underlying anxiety from coming up short after 2014,” Soto admits. “I wanted to bring it back to the beginning of the band — a revived version of our younger selves in my garage in 2009. No timelines, no pressure. No need to fit a certain mold.”
In late 2018, an invitation to open the 10-year anniversary tour of their pals Man Overboard pulled Seahaven out of hibernation.“I was really feeling the nerves because it had been so long since we were out onstage in front of people,” Soto says. “I remember sitting with Cody in the green room and kind of tripping out. Then you hit the first chord and all of a sudden you’re back in your element.”
The Man Overboard run inspired Seahaven to book their own headlining shows, a pair of successful L.A. gigs packed with familiar fans to close out the year. Then, while out catching their friends Balance and Composure’s farewell tour in Pomona, a chance conversation revealed Pure Noise Records founder (and longtime Seahaven fan) Jake Round was interested in releasing a future project. “He gave us complete freedom to do whatever we wanted,” Soto says. “That’s pretty much all we needed.”
The final checkpoint was returning to Costa Rica — the site of that empty-handed 2016 recording session — to play a warmly-received show in April 2019 to numerous friends and family. Soto is half Costa Rican and a frequent visitor (“They have a cool little scene down there that follows indie and hardcore,” he says) and this show in San José finally completed the revival cycle for the entire band.
Inspiration restored, Halo of Hurt swells with energy and intrigue. “Harbor” captures Seahaven’s evolution perfectly: guitar tones shimmering like ripples on a lake, just before the sturdy riffs of a gripping chorus — and a potential new live staple — barrel their way in. Another haunting standout, “Moon” is well worth the sleeplessness it may induce, with its distorted guitar screeches, Findlay’s skittering snare, and Soto’s dusky lullabies (“You were safe below the moon, weren’t you?”) A cocoon of pretty plucking and ghostly guitar effects, “Bait” may be the most gorgeous thing the band has ever written.
Seahaven completed the self-produced LP at the Omaha, Nebraska studio Another Recording Company in early 2020, mere days before much of the country found itself in indefinite lockdown. While the details of how Seahaven will be ultimately be able to perform Halo of Hurt to fans remain obscured, the band’s intent is anything but. “Our fans’ online presence has been a big reason for this whole process,” Soto says. “Fans being inquisitive, hoping and wishing: Is there a new release? I thought you guys went and did a record in Costa Rica? They never fizzled out. We knew people still cared.”