Pop Evil with Royal Tusk

Who

Pop Evil
Royal Tusk

When

  • December 3, 2018

Tickets available online HERE 

When North Muskegon, Michigan native Leigh Kakaty formed Pop Evil, he chose the band’s name for a  reason. He loved hard rock songs with good melodies but he also dug loud, crunchy guitars and propulsive  metal rhythms. For Kakaty, it’s a natural duality that came from growing up in the Great Lakes and it  eventually became the raison d’etre of his band.    “It’s just a natural part of who I am,” Kakaty says.

“When I was growing up we’d roll out to the beach on the  weekdays with an acoustic guitar and everyone would kick it. And on the weekends, we’d turn up the amps  and, boom, everyone would try to break windows. It was all about the heaviness. And I needed both of those  elements – the melodic and the metallic.”    Five albums into Pop Evil’s career, combining strong hooks with knockout punches is more important than  ever. The band’s new record, simply called Pop Evil, is a surging, contemporary sounding release that  incorporates metal, alternative, hard rock and even electronic music. In the wake of the band’s peppy, upbeat  2015 album Up, it’s a wake-up call, a musical rebirth that inspired the band to self-title the release, partially  since they’d never done so. Their first album, Lipstick on the Mirror
came out in 2008, and while it introduced  listeners to the band’s core sound with well-received singles like “Hero” and “100 in a 55
,” Pop Evil has  grown exponentially since then.   

Pop Evil captures Kakaty and his bandmates – rhythm guitarist Dave Grahs, lead guitarist Nick Fuelling,  bassist Matt DiRito and drummer Hayley Cramer – at their most inspiring. Every song on the album offers a  different spin on the concept behind the band’s name and in an era when many rock bands create a few  strong singles, and six or seven less memorable songs and call it an album, Pop Evil is all killer, no filler – the  best 11 songs culled from 30 demos.   

There’s plenty to be excited about on Pop Evil. The first single, “Waking Lions” starts with clattery electronic  drums and a chugging guitar riff interjected with a squealing harmonic, then the first verse kicks in like a mob  smashing down the doors the confine them. As Kakaty hits the euphoric chorus – backed by buzzing guitars  and a minor-key counter melody – he sings about reaching within and overcoming obstacles “I want to stand  up 100 feet tall / ‘Cause fear will never lead my way / I’m ready to run 100 miles strong / I will never be the  same.”   

By contrast, “Colors Bleed” – for which the band shot an insightful video -- was inspired by current events  and features a charged rhythm, incisive guitar licks, and confrontational vocals. “Step aside watch the colors  bleed / The rise of democracy / Fight the System / Stop and listen / True colors, how can you miss ‘em? /  Born with knowledge, raise the fist / Face the enemy, just resist.”   
The song blends aggressive rock vocals and rapping, bringing to mind Rage of Machine

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