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MacksHangLahnny
The Macks

What is The Thing? It’s a New York band, sure, but it’s also an ethos. A return to rock & roll’s roots — to garage bands toiling between the family minivans, to groups like the Beatles and their unique alchemy, to tape machines and live band recordings instead of slick studios and myriad songwriters. “We’ve kind of adapted the ethos of: with restriction comes creativity — old becomes new. And throughout every part of the process that remains true,” says guitarist/vocalist Jack Bradley.

Never is that more apparent than on their self-titled third record, out August 6th on their own label. A rough and tumble suite of 12 songs that nods to everyone from The Kinks to The White Stripes, The Thing sounds like old New York revivicated and remixed. “It showcases all of us, all of our different personalities,” says bassist/vocalist Zane Acord. “In The Thing, we’re a collective band. We hang our hats on being a true band — where we all have the spotlight. I think that gives us a different edge.” That album follows 2023’s debut, Here’s the Thing, and The Things Is, which dropped the following year.

The four members of Thing came from intersecting backgrounds, lending to their rock-and-roll-as-melting-pot vibe. Acord grew up with a drummer dad who hipped him to bands like Led Zeppelin and Grand Funk Railroad; he met guitarist/vocals Michael Carter — an avid Beatles fan — in middle school. The duo went on to collect Bradley in high school, an aspiring producer with a studio in his basement and a yen for psych rock. Jazz drummer Lucas Ebeling linked up with the band when everyone found their way to New York in 2022. They’ve since played more than 300 shows across the world.

The band’s self-titled work, then, is a culmination of all those influences — and all that hustle. “We threw all of our different various influences throughout — all the decades of rock and roll and adjacent genres — and ended up with something of our own,” Bradley says. “Our contribution to the genre. Our style. Our… thing.”

LONG LIVE THE THING

MacksHangLahnny

The Macks

“All the identity and none of the crisis! The Macks are in their own pocket. Your DIY wet dream
are hardened road warriors and goblins of their basement studio.
A Macks set is a sonic-fucking-circus. Virile and award-winning like a show horse, they are
turning heads around the country and internationally through the airwaves and their touring
roadshow.
The Macks are brothers Josef and Ben Windheim, Sam Fulwiler, Jacob Michael Perris, and
Aidan Harrison. In 2022, the band came out with their lockdown project “Rabbit”, a raw and
progressive take on rock and roll that launched them towards festivals and tours from Idaho to
Mexico City. And just months later, the band followed it up with “Dajiban”, building on the
creative successes of Rabbit and driving the band into more expansive, catchy, gnarly, and
unmistakably “Macks” territory. Now, the band is sharpening their edges as they prepare to
launch a new record in 2024 – pungent, pointed, and powerful, the upcoming release contains
the band’s most realized work to date. With a lineup that has the group firing on all cylinders
both live and in the studio, “Portland’s Best New Band” (Willamette Week) has folks tuning in
and spelling it right.”

Pserp Photo PLUMVISION IMG 7749

Plum Vision

Plum Vision is an all girl punk/alternative rock trio from Boise, ID, composed of Kiyah Amanie, Ella Thurston, and Megan Miller.

With aggressive yet playful energy that harkens back to groups from The Runaways to Hole, Plum Vision’s sound is the best of ‘90s Seattle riot grrrl punk with a heavy dose of late ‘70s psych rock.

Seamlessly balancing between sweet-voiced melodies and hard-hitting power cords, Plum Vision does not shy away from big feelings and sucker punch lyrics that cut to the bone.