Concerts
DIE SPITZ
+ GUESTS
Date(s)
đ„ DIE SPITZ (US) đ„.
IN LUXEMBOURG FOR THE FIRST TIME
When the Venn diagram of passion, friendship, identity, and artistry collide, it can feel as if fighting words are spitting from your veins. And as postmodern society crumbles, Die Spitz giddily bounce between a dozen different ways to push back. If the world of rock music were an ice cream shop, the Austin quartet have sampled each flavor, flipped the freezer over, and started dancing with the employees they helped unionize. On their debut album, Something to Consume (due Sept 12 via Third Man Records), Ava Schrobilgen, Chloe De St. Aubin, Eleanor Livingston, and Kate Halter fight against the inescapable consumption that surrounds life. âThereâs a political side to it, but addiction and love can also be all-consuming,â Livingston says. And as the foursome trade off instruments, swapping songwriting and vocal duties, and generating powerful songwriting in concussive bursts, Die Spitz have created their own little pocket of the world where we can all stand on the edge together.Â
.That unity comes in part from the deep bonds between the 22-year-olds. All four are Austin natives, with Schrobilgen and Livingston having met in preschool, befriending Halter in middle school, and immediately bringing De St. Aubin into their inner circle when they formed the band in 2022. The group was initially just looking to find reasons to hang out more often, and decided to start a band after a late-night viewing of the Mötley CrĂŒe movie The Dirt. Though theyâve only been playing together a few years (not to mention Halter only learning to play bass to start the band), Something to Consume shows a maturity and technical prowess always wielded in service of their profound friendship.Â
The group settled on the name Die Spitz over a âbrown bag of Fireballâ, opting for the feminine German definite article in place of the English. âIt reminds me of the Grim Reaper spitting,â Livingston jokes. At their first live shows, they paired originals with covers from some of their inspirations: Black Sabbath, Pixies, Mudhoney, PJ Harvey, and Nirvana. The beguiling "Pop Punk Anthem" somehow encapsulates elements throughout that large musical swath, building from roiling verses to a growled chorus. âIt may sound like a love song at first, but when the beat kicks in itâs the obsession that takes over,â Schrobilgen says. âThe words âyouâre a part of meâ sound loving but it can be an insane emotion and privilege over someone elseâs life.âÂ
As if their closeness as a band werenât enough, the members of Die Spitz have also intermittently been roommates and still live near each other. âWe call it sitcom life,â Livingston laughs. That said, the Die Spitz TV show would have a significantly different soundtrack to your usual sitcom fare. The Austinites express their ideas through a blend of classic punk, hardcore, metal, alt rock and more. The group have become known for their riotous live shows, where dueling cartwheels, Halter playing bass mid-crowdsurf, Schrobilgen unleashing a growling bark, and Livingston posing with the microphone on top of the venueâs bar or climbing into the rafters could happen at any moment. Pairing their mind-melting gigs with even more impressive songs has led to stints opening for (and rivaling the energy of) bands like OFF!, Amyl and the Sniffers, Viagra Boys, and Sleater-Kinney.Â
That shapeshifting strength comes into full view on the explosive âThrow Yourself to the Swordâ, a song that raises a righteous fist of empowerment over thrash guitar. âThrow yourself/ To the sword,â the start-stop chorus begins, before taking a more modern turn. âWhatâs it like knowing/ None of you bitches can compete?â Livingston sees the song as an important reminder to let go of insecurities and embrace the power you have over yourselfâsomething that unifies the Die Spitz catalog. âBe the bad bitch you are amongst the mundane and use your voice as a young person,â she says. âDonât let these old fools tell you you canât do anything.âÂ
Whether on the punk chug of "RIDING WITH MY GIRLS" or the syrupy grunge of "Go Get Dressed", Something to Consume moves with rapturous conviction thanks in part to the deft production hand of Studio 4âs Will Yip. Though only recently in their 20s, Die Spitzâs impressive musicianship ties them clearly to a long lineage of frustrated people hoping to inspire change. âSome people arenât interested in being political activists via music, but it weighs on me heavily and I feel misaligned with my calling if I donât,â De St. Aubin says. âThe four of us are free spirits with multiple interests, and thereâs no limit or power dynamic that can derail us.âÂ
The thrumming âVoir Direâ embodies that expressive strength, an acoustic-driven jam that airs frustrations with American globalism. âUnless weâre part of the few in power, weâll someday be victimized and regret that we didnât act now,â De St. Aubin adds. âAmerica brings war on marginalized people in our own country and other lands, and being complacent will not be comfortable forever.â Elsewhere, the grimy and pained âPunishersâ explores the frustration and ache of a relationship that just wonât work despite best intentionsâtwo people punishing each other instead of just letting go. But even when theyâre tackling these sort of impactful themes, Die Spitz infuse the proceedings with a golden warmth. These arenât songs of vicious mockery, but charged rallying callsâwhich in turn ties back to the bandâs origin story. âIt was a joke that went too far,â Halter smirks. âWe never thought it was going to be a real thing.âÂ
Across 11 tracks, Something to Consume contains multitudes and yet feels of a singular piece, an expansive and expressive set unified in its camaraderie and freedom. âWe depend on our freedomâfreedom to do what we want, present the ideas we want, make the music we want,â Livingston says. âWhether itâs based in metal or something soft, no matter which of us wrote the song, we all contribute and work together. As a person, I donât have a strong ego or voice, but within this band each one of us is capable of so much more.â
Die Spitz is a mayhem-inciting rock four piece from Austin TX. Founded in 2022 the quartet (Ava Schrobilgen, Chloe Andrews, Ellie Livingston, and Kate Halter) is known for their unruly stage presence, bombarding their crowds with a wall of sound which as Austin Monthly put it: âyouthful moxie has never sounded so goodâ.
Having become a staple of the Austin music scene they've extended beyond the state of Texas supporting national tours for legendary acts Amyl and the Sniffers, Sleater-Kinney and OFF!. After self-releasing several singles and an EP these childhood friends turned musicians will record their debut LP in the Spring of 2025.