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GRUMPSTER - Fever Dream

Fever Dream, their first album on new label Pure Noise Records is out the today and features previously released singles 'Crash' and 'Looking Good.'

GRUMPSTER - Fever Dream
GRUMPSTER - Fever Dream

The band have also released a new video for the title track of the record, Fever Dream. Speaking about the new single the band said 'Fever Dream is about being delusional. Going through every day pretending you’re somewhere you’re not, doing anything other than what you’re presently doing. Being in a haze most of the time and not being able to snap out of it.'

About Fever Dream

Grumpster’s Pure Noise Records debut, FEVER DREAM, was put into motion quickly after the release of debut album Underwhelmed, which they never were able to tour properly due to the pandemic.
 
 “We waited and waited to tour Underwhelmed, but things never stopped looking pretty bleak,” says Donnie Walsh. “We ended up doing a live stream with Anti-Flag during the pandemic where Chris #2 told us, ‘Write some new songs and let me produce them!’ We thought, ‘Oh, god, I guess we have to make a new record now.’”
 
 Produced by Chris #2 of Anti-Flag, at District Recording in San Jose, FEVER DREAM filters the ghosts of the East Bay’s melodic punk history through Grumpster’s signature garage rock sound – which Alternative Press hailed as “a ’96 mixtape that has the Breeders, Huggy Bear and Imperial Teen on it.”
 
 Ferocious power chords, buoyant choruses, and DIY energy filtered through modern sonics fill the album’s 10 songs, as the band explore the push and pull between dead-end relationships and more introspective moments and how the two intersect to create a cycle of anxiety and self-loathing, yes, but also ultimately resilience.
 
 FEVER DREAM is an album that, just like its bursts of double-time tempos and shout-along choruses, elevates waves of emotions – the ones that seemingly come out of nowhere and have the ability to salvage or shipwreck your entire day.


In November 2019, Oakland punk trio GRUMPSTER were fresh off the release of their debut full-length album, the Asian Man Records-released Underwhelmed, and set to embark on a victory lap tour in spring 2020 with Anti-Flag when … well, you know what happens next.
 
Back to the drawing board for the band – singer/bassist Donnie Walsh (he/him), drummer Noel Agtane (he/him) and guitarist Lalo Gonzalez Deetz (he/him) – who formed in 2016 after the three Guitar Center alums bonded over their love of the sweat-soaked 924 Gilman-forged punk sound that swept the underground in the ’80s and ’90s.
 
“We waited and waited to tour Underwhelmed, but things never stopped looking pretty bleak,” says Walsh. “We ended up doing a live stream with Anti-Flag during the pandemic where Chris #2 told us, ‘Write some new songs and let me produce them!’ We thought, ‘Oh, god, I guess we have to make a new record now.’”

About GRUMPSTER

“The Underwhelmed album cycle was basically over before it began,” Agtane adds. “We were so proud of that album, but being able to do another one so quickly felt like a built-in reset.”
 
This willingness to embrace the unknown with open arms – to blow up their plans and instead let fate take control – is what makes Grumpster’s Pure Noise Records debut, FEVER DREAM, so compelling, relatable, and ultimately inspiring.
 
Produced by Chris #2, just as he jokingly demanded, at District Recording in San Jose, FEVER DREAM filters the ghosts of the East Bay’s melodic punk history through Grumpster’s signature garage rock sound – which Alternative Press hailed as “a ’96 mixtape that has the Breeders, Huggy Bear and Imperial Teen on it.”


“Authenticity has always been really important to us,” Gonzalez Deetz says. “It’s that feeling you get in your chest when something feels real. We want to sound like a band in a garage, otherwise it’s not going to be believable.”
 
Ferocious power chords, buoyant choruses, and DIY energy filtered through modern sonics fill the album’s 10 songs, as the band explore the push and pull between dead-end relationships (“Looking Good,” the blistering, riff-heavy “Picture”) and more introspective moments (“Better Than Dead,” first single “Crash,” the acoustic-based “Vicious”) – and how the two intersect to create a cycle of anxiety and self-loathing, yes, but also ultimately resilience.
 
“Nothing was really going on in life while we were writing these songs,” Walsh says. “It challenged us to look inward and deal with things and feelings we might have otherwise tried to forget.”
 
FEVER DREAM is an album that, just like its bursts of double-time tempos and shout-along choruses, elevates waves of emotions – the ones that seemingly come out of nowhere and have the ability to salvage or shipwreck your entire day. Look no further than first single “Crash,” born from a particularly mundane day that morphed into the centerpiece of the album.
 
“I was having a bad day and driving to band practice,” Walsh remembers of the song’s genesis. “I felt like I was so pissed I wanted to drive my car into the center median. I got to the practice space, and ‘Crash’ came right out.”
 
It’s those moments that require act-first-think-later impulsiveness, that force you to tackle them with the purset, most honest response available at the time, that sometimes end up charting life’s course. Grumpster certainly learned that better than anyone during the detour they took making FEVER DREAM. They learned a lot about themselves as well – mainly that they don’t deal with solitude all that well.
 
It’s been a long climb to get to this point, where the future in front of them is filled with more excitement than uncertainty. The trio especially can’t wait to finally get back on the road in front of the people who best understand them: their fans.