Deeper Announce Auto-Pain Live at Chicago Cultural Center, Share Working Men's Club Remix

Deeper_LiveatCC_PressPhoto.jpg

Deeper celebrate the one year anniversary of Auto-Pain (“a thrilling listen” - Vice Noisey") with a ticketed performance live from the Chicago Cultural Center via Noonchorus on March 27th. Tickets are on sale now HERE, watch a trailer below and if you were planning on seeing the band at all last year now's the time to support!

Deeper released their critically acclaimed sophomore album, Auto-Pain, almost exactly one year ago. The band was on the cusp of a full year of touring, coming off of a European run with Twin Peaks and a triumphant NYC release show at Rough Trade, including headline tours in North America and Europe and coveted opening slots when the pandemic began and dashed all of those plans. Instead of succumbing to what could easily have been a devastating blow to a band whose star is on the rise, Deeper decided to hunker down, regroup and took a new tact in enlisting Working Mens Club to re-imagine their debut single from 2020. What began as an aggressive and angular post-punk anthem to beating back the depths of Chicago winters has been twisted and re-shaped into a glitchy, erratic electronic track with bone-rattling bursts of bass that drive this eerie track. Working Mens Club create a world of skittering drums and pops of techno noise that distort “This Heat” into something barely recognizable but thoroughly captivating. You can hear the new remix here and stay tuned as Deeper have more collaborations and new music in store for the one year anniversary of Auto-Pain.

Stream Working Men’s Club Remix of “This Heat”

Buy Auto-Pain!

Deeper - Auto-Pain
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What do you do when pain blots out joy? How do you learn to take care of yourself? What happens when the things you think are helping end up doing the most harm? 'Auto-Pain' is the Sophomore album from Deeper, a record that finds the band embracing open space, using synths to create shadows where bricks of guitars once would’ve blocked out the sun. The group — singer and guitarist Nic Gohl, bassist Drew McBride, and drummer Shiraz Bhatti — were all graduates of Chicago’s rich DIY scene who came together around their love of Wire, Devo, Gang of Four, and Television. While the new record is still within the Great Lakes post-punk tradition of their debut, the album isn’t as insular as its predecessor; it’s less interested in pile-driving and more willing to dwell in liminal spaces. Guitars enter the picture precisely, locked bass grooves propel things forward. Drummer Shiraz Bhatti, who is half-Pakistani and half-Native American, embraced the drumming patterns he’d heard growing up at pow-wows, channeling the anxieties of his heritage into his playing and keeping the group grounded when they switch into all-out percussive attack. The result is an album both more nuanced and catchy.

Auto-Pain represents the constant wave of depression felt by many in everyday life. Stemmed from Aldous Huxley’s ‘Brave New World’, Auto-Pain is a concept meant to be an inverse to soma, a pill in the book which makes everything numb. The idea of auto-pain is to epitomize the desire to return to a connection with thoughts and clarity, which comes at the expense of feeling everything simultaneously. The album artwork features the now-demolished Prentice Women’s Hospital in Chicago capturing the band’s rounded-off brutalism, and the album title appears in Urdu, a nod to drummer Shiraz Bhatti’s Pakistani heritage. The record was recorded and mixed by Chicago scene luminary Dave Vetraino (Lala Lala, Dehd) and mastered at Chicago Mastering by Greg Obis (Ne-Hi, Melkbelly).

  • A portion of the proceeds from Auto-Pain will be donated to Hope For The Day an organization that actively works to break the silence surrounding mental health.

Deeper - Color Vinyl Bundle
Sale Price: $39.99 Original Price: $45.99

What do you do when pain blots out joy? How do you learn to take care of yourself? What happens when the things you think are helping end up doing the most harm? 'Auto-Pain' is the Sophomore album from Deeper, a record that finds the band embracing open space, using synths to create shadows where bricks of guitars once would’ve blocked out the sun. The group — singer and guitarist Nic Gohl, bassist Drew McBride, and drummer Shiraz Bhatti — were all graduates of Chicago’s rich DIY scene who came together around their love of Wire, Devo, Gang of Four, and Television. While the new record is still within the Great Lakes post-punk tradition of their debut, the album isn’t as insular as its predecessor; it’s less interested in pile-driving and more willing to dwell in liminal spaces. Guitars enter the picture precisely, locked bass grooves propel things forward. Drummer Shiraz Bhatti, who is half-Pakistani and half-Native American, embraced the drumming patterns he’d heard growing up at pow-wows, channeling the anxieties of his heritage into his playing and keeping the group grounded when they switch into all-out percussive attack. The result is an album both more nuanced and catchy.

Auto-Pain represents the constant wave of depression felt by many in everyday life. Stemmed from Aldous Huxley’s ‘Brave New World’, Auto-Pain is a concept meant to be an inverse to soma, a pill in the book which makes everything numb. The idea of auto-pain is to epitomize the desire to return to a connection with thoughts and clarity, which comes at the expense of feeling everything simultaneously. The album artwork features the now-demolished Prentice Women’s Hospital in Chicago capturing the band’s rounded-off brutalism, and the album title appears in Urdu, a nod to drummer Shiraz Bhatti’s Pakistani heritage. The record was recorded and mixed by Chicago scene luminary Dave Vetraino (Lala Lala, Dehd) and mastered at Chicago Mastering by Greg Obis (Ne-Hi, Melkbelly).

  • A portion of the proceeds from Auto-Pain will be donated to Hope For The Day an organization that actively works to break the silence surrounding mental health.

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