Kassie Krut Unveil New Single, "Blood," From Debut EP Out This Friday
Kassie Krut — the NYC outfit comprise of Kasra Kurt, Eve Alpert, and Matt Anderegg — will release their debut self-titled EP this Friday via Fire Talk Records. Today, the trio unveil its final advance single, “Blood.” Kassie Krut have settled into a commanding partnership fit for muddy raves, basement punk spaces and festival stages alike, and “Blood” skitters along the dance floor’s periphery. “I—I—I—I kinda wanna break you up,” Alpert intones with a cool indifference atop frenetic drums. “I—I—I—I kinda wanna make you mine.” “Blood” offers one more glimpse at the group’s self-produced debut, which smudges starkness and filth from front to back.
“Blood” follows a delirious trail of singles — the “explosive introduction” (CLASH) of “Reckless” and the “ultramodern, otherworldly” (The Line of Best Fit) “Racing Man” — which have been released to rapturous praise ahead of Kassie Krut’s release. To celebrate the EP, Kassie Krut will perform an EP release show at TV EYE on Tuesday, December 10th with performances by Club Casualties, Macula Dog, as well as a DJ set from Chanel Beads. Tickets are on sale here.
Kurt and Alpert spent their teenage years in London, whose streets and airwaves were suffused with the sounds of dub, grime, and garage. Those early encounters were soon joined by regard for SOPHIE’s candied hyperpop, Tirzah’s attitudinal minimalism, and DAF’s turn to electronic body music. Together the duo were two parts of Philadelphia rock institution Palm, who called it quits in 2023 after ten years and three-acclaimed albums. Following the split, Kurt decamped to New York with Alpert and Matt Anderegg, who produced Palm’s final record. Playing together (in person and sometimes remotely), the longtime friends and collaborators christened the current three-headed incarnation of Kassie Krut.
Alpert’s vocals are brash, triumphal, and mordacious. On “Reckless,” she sing-spells the name of the band in the style of a playground taunt, satirizing the lexicon of pop egoism while acknowledging its affective power. Here and elsewhere, the lyric sheet holds a series of affirmations equally suited for tonight’s disco or tomorrow morning’s mirror, though with odd artifacts of lived specificity. Even as the sounds of impossible instruments are labored over in minute detail, the group’s delivery maintains an air of detached playfulness, deploying a metallic, fun-house-mirror reflection of the contemporary pop idiom.
After years of twisting rock instrumentation into unknown shapes, the first release by Kassie Krut represents a transformative refocusing of energies. These tracks evince the kind of wisdom that only comes from experience—and the kind of experience that can only be scored by new sounds, still glittering with the metal filings of their making.