Don’t drink the water
I’ll drink it anyway
Too much to drink
Too much to dream
And it seems ok
The psychedelic 4000s
Yippie yippie yi yippie yippie yi yay
Waiting for you to come home to my domesticated dream
Give me a balcony
Give me my own kitchen
House and tree
I’ll shout that it’s ok
Wippie way yi wippie way
The psychedelic 4000s
Yippie yippie yi yippie yippie yi yay
Waiting for you to come home to my domesticated dream
about
The stubbornly high spirited SUEP create oddball car-boot-sale pop with a sprinkle of theatrical storytelling. Led by SuepLord (Porridge Radio, Garden Centre) and Brain Wastefield (UK top model), SUEP is borne out of a near-decade of wearing silly clothes and playing music together.
After relocating from Brighton to London, the pair added GN (The GN Band, Joanna Gruesome, The Tubs), Freakin' Deacon (PC World, Garden Centre), and T-Mr.9 (Head of Pastoral Care) to the line-up. They take turns writing songs and taking lead vocal duties, but manage to create a coherent world of playful collaboration. Their songs take the listener through haunted castles, deprived encounters, days lost to the imagination in bed, and through the integral friendships that give SUEP the energy to keep dancing to their own beat.
SUEP’s infectious debut single Domesticated Dream combines a classic 70s Yamaha disco beat, deep bass, nostalgic drum machine sounds, a whole lot of cowbells, and hooky melodies. It’s about homelife, drinking too much, and making big plans that never come to fruition.
credits
released October 5, 2021
SUEP are:
SuepLord (keys/vocals)
Brian Wastefield (keys/guitar/vocals)
T-Mr.9 (keys/bass/guitar/vocals)
GN (guitar/bass/vocals)
Freakin' Deacon (drums/percussion, pads).
Produced by Matthew Green at Red Lion Boys Club
Mixed by Mike O’Malley
Entirely analog, lush melodic pop with a tender heart from L.A. artist Human Barbie sounds bigger than the bedroom project it is. Bandcamp New & Notable Oct 22, 2020
supported by 4 fans who also own “Domesticated Dream”
I was one of the few who couldn't quite embrace "New Long Leg", so when they released the follow-up "Stumpwork", it was much easier to embrace. More haunting, adventurous and brooding than its' predecessor. Matthew Flores