The art-damaged Brooklyn band
Bodega want to get people thinking while they boogie, and their debut album from 2018,
Endless Scroll, spotlights an abrasive dance-punk sound built on shouted vocals, deep thoughts, and jumpy rhythms. While they sanded off some of the rough sonic edges on subsequent releases like 2019's Shiny New Model EP and 2022's album Broken Equipment, they kept the lyrics sharp and the music bouncy.
Bodega formed when guitarist/vocalist
Ben Hozie and vocalist Nikki Belfiglio's previous group, Bodega Bay, downsized their name and changed the lineup. That band formed in 2013, released Our Brand Could Be Your Life, an album recorded on the internal mike in GarageBand, in 2015, then split the next year. When they relaunched as
Bodega,
Hozie and Belfiglio kept much of that group's spiky post-punk energy and snarky anti-consumerist attitude and built a new lineup that featured guitarist Madison Velding-Vandam, bassist Heather Elle, and drummer Montana Simone. They began playing shows around the city and elsewhere, opening for
Protomartyr and
La Luz, among others.
With a batch of songs ready -- some written mere weeks earlier as the Bodega Bay lineup was dissolving --
Bodega headed off to record their debut album. With Austin Brown of
Parquet Courts working the dials on the Tascam 388 tape machine his band used to record their classic
Light Up Gold, the collection of shouty and melodic post-post-punk tunes came together, and
Endless Scroll was released by What's Yr Rupture? in July 2018. As the album hit record store shelves,
Bodega toured the U.S. as headliners for the first time. They also played shows in the U.K., and the live album
Witness Scroll was recorded at clubs in Glasgow and London. When the group headed back into the studio to record more songs, Simone had been replaced by
Tai Lee. The band released the cleaned-up and more-focused Shiny New Model EP in late 2019.
After the EP was released,
Hozie and Belfiglio launched themselves into a film career, making a mark as the filmmakers behind 2020's PVT CHAT. They had to put this pursuit on hold due to COVID-19 restrictions and switched focus back to the band. Again working with drummer
Lee, the duo also called on the skills of bassist Adam See and lead guitarist Dan Ryan to work on a set of songs inspired by the band's book club -- where they read and studied the work of a number of philosophers -- and their feelings about modern world annoyances like advertising, gentrification, and positivity. Produced by
Hozie, with the help of the group's live sound mixer Bobby Lewis, 2022's Broken Equipment balances their witty, intense lyrics with sparkling-clean modern new wave sounds. ~ Tim Sendra