đ¶ The Sophs (US) at Haldern Pop Bar
đ
Sonntag, 07. September 2025
đ Einlass: 19 / Beginn: 21 Uhr
đ Haldern Pop Bar
đ Eintritt Frei!
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YT:
SP:
https://open.spotify.com/album/1Opey02fRwqQTeOqwUSvY7?si=8scQJNmYRs-hsIfU9ivb9A
Insta:
https://www.instagram.com/sophsesque
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About :
Degenerate posturing. The Sophsâ frontman Ethan Ramon knows what heâs singing is wrong â but how else do you get those impulses out?
âSometimes it's important to write from the perspective of the worst part of yourself so that version of yourself can live through the music rather than exist in your day-to-day life,â Ramon said.
Itâs not him, but itâs not not him.
And heâs going to places most people wouldnât dare.
The bandâs brutal honesty, flamingly intrusive thoughts, and broad genre-spreading caught the attention of Rough Trade founders Geoff Travis and Jeannette Lee immediately. When Ramon sent a demo reel out to his favorite indies, he wasnât expecting any replies. But Travis and Lee were in his inbox the next day, asking if heâd hop on a call.
Rough Trade heard the sort of creativity and variety â and âdonât expect me to act prettyâ sentiment â that could get The Sophs â including Ramon, Sam Yuh (keyboards), Austin Parker Jones (electric guitar), Seth Smades (acoustic guitar), Devin Russ (drums), and Cole Bobbitt (bass) â a slot on nearly any stage. They heard a five-song seed of their debut record GOLDSTAR, out TK.
At any moment, The Sophs are entering pop-punk; blazing through funk; talk-singing to the audience. Their enthusiasm for every iteration is evident, and Ramonâs rich, full voice deftly nestles into endless categories, utterly chameleonic.
âWe never try to be as versatile as we end up being,â Ramon said. GOLDSTAR has a Delta Blues-style song; it has a ZZ Top-inspired tune. To some degree, The Sophs see song creation like pop art: theyâre focused on the idea of reproducing something over and over again until it's meaningless.
âI want to steal and plagiarize and borrow,â Ramon said. âAt the end of the day, the music is going to sound incredible.â
The genre mix comes on the heels of sparks of inspiration: Ramon will bring Yuh a song and pull out a piece (e.g., âI want drums like thatâ) and theyâll create something altogether new. Take the vaudevillian âTHE DOG DIES IN THE END.â In an aughts pop-punk croon, Ramon takes listeners through a laundry list of intrusive, cruel thoughts, cresting over Yuhâs accordion. On sunny-rock âDEATH IN THE FAMILY,â heâs similarly disaffected, with the tongue-in-cheek refrain âI need a death in the familyâ seeking pity and attention that covers up any misdeeds.
âYou are so scared of taking accountability and being perceived that the only way you find to gain some sort of emotional leverage is to garner sympathy,â Ramon said.
Thatâs the only way to quiet criticism.
But the albumâs voice isnât huddling in the corner, afraid of perception. The record asks, whereâs my gold star? Whereâs my validation? Why am I not being rewarded for how much of a good person I am? Am I doing mitzvahs for the right reason? The titular track â which kicks off with flamenco-style fingerpicking â wrestles with the philosophy of really being good and what that looks like.
âSWEETIEPIE,â which kicks off with a palm-muted guitar and count-in reminiscent of Bright Eyesâ âAt The Bottom of Everything,â veers quickly into what can only be described as emo bluegrass. At first, it sounds like a love song, but as you tune into the verses it becomes clear that the narratorâs being rejected, and he's drunk, and heâs kind of awful.
On â90s rock, Radiohead-reminiscent âSWEAT,â eerie verses of gentle warning explode into pent-up rage. Like most of The Sophsâ songs, it doesnât let you relax â mostly because you never know whatâs coming next. The band has a passion for sudden and complete destruction, for playing with the tension between pulled-back silence and total explosion.
In emo-leading âBLITZED AGAIN,â as the grunge dissolves into Ramonâs falsetto, and then what can only be described as a nigun â the entire band joining in an utterly joyful, near-spiritual chorus. In practice, theyâre bouncing through the room, slapping a tambourine, bending backwards as their voices soar.
Thatâs where you hear The Sophs membersâ as they really are: explosively positive, happy, collaborative. Think of the âdegenerative posturingâ instead as a âjesterâs privilege.â When theyâre playing together in a room, you see nothing like the character theyâre putting forward. Instead, you feel a bombastic, thrilling energy that underlies the sextetâs creative power.
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