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Sunami (band)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sunami
Sunami live at 1720 Warehouse, Los Angeles, in 2023
Background information
OriginSan Jose, California, U.S.
Genres
Years active2019–present
Labels
  • Triple B
  • Creator-Destructor
  • Viewpoint
Spinoff of
Members
  • Josef Alfonso
  • Mike "Durt" Durrett
  • Theo Dominguez
  • Benny Eissmann

Sunami is an American hardcore punk band formed in San Jose, California in 2019. Originally intended as a short-lived joke band by members of various San Francisco Bay Area hardcore bands, Sunami sought to parody the ignorant style of many hardcore bands on their 2019 demo Demonstration. However, after gaining notoriety for their violent debut live performance, the band continued past their planned time frame. They have since released three EPs, with their debut self-titled album being released on June 14, 2023. A 2023 article by Revolver credited them as "in the upper echelon of bands dominating the hardcore zeitgeist".[1]

History

[edit]

The members who would go on to form Sunami first met through attending local San Francisco Bay Area hardcore shows.[2] Each of member had been a part of other bands in the area including Gulch, Hands of God, Drain, Spinebreaker and Lead Dream.[3] The band formed in 2019, as a joke band parodying the ignorance of some hardcore.[4] After Josef Alfonso suggested the band's concept, bassist Theo Dominguez proposed the name Sunami, having thought of the name around a decade prior, and Mike Durrett began writing the instrumentals at their friend Charles Toshio's home studio. Toshio wrote and recorded the drums of this early material structured the instrumental parts. This material was released as their debut demo Demonstration, on August 19, 2019. At this time, they intended to only perform live three times as a band: a live debut and EP release show; a breakup show; and a reunion show.[2]

Their live debut was on October 26, 2019, which publications such as Stereogum noted for the obscenity of its moshing, which included people hardcore dancing in Halloween costumes, with boxing gloves and multiple people beginning to bleed despite the set only lasting eight minutes.[5] The performance took place at the San Jose Peace & Justice Center, a women and children's refuge center in San Jose, with the band performing in the smaller living room. The capacity of the room was only seventy but around one hundred people attended, with another one hundred people left outside. Drummer Benny Eissmann joined the band only hours before the performance, after Durrett had posted on his Instagram story asking whether anybody could play drums for it, with the band's first ever rehearsal taking place the same day. Videos of the performance began gaining traction on Twitter and in the following week the band were offered spots to perform at FYA Festival and Sound and Fury Festivals. However, before these events could take place, the COVID-19 lockdowns began, leading to live performances being unable to go ahead.[2]

On March 1, 2021, they released a split EP with Gulch.[6] then they released their debut self-titled EP June 5, 2021.[7] The band's second live performance was a guerrilla-style show which around 2000 people attended on June 19, 2021, in San Jose alongside Gulch, Drain, Scowl, Xibalba and Maya Over Eyes.[8] The performance was in a disused parking lot outside a warehouse their friend owned and the stage was built that morning by Gulch vocalist Elliot Morrow.[2] This was followed by another outside performance on June 27 at the Lvl Up San Jose Punk Rock Flea Market with support from Fentanyl, Lead Dream, Connoisseur and Extinguish.[9] On May 20, 2022, they released their LP Promo EP.[10] On July 30, they performed at the 2022 Sound Fury Festival.[11]

The band's first North American headline tour took place in Spring 2023, with all 28 dates selling out.[1] In May and June they toured Australia with Scowl and Speed.[12] On June 14, they released their self-titled debut album.[13] Between June 23 and July 9, they coheadlined a European tour with No Pressure and support from Pain of Truth, Restraining Order and C4.[14] Between September 16 and 24, 2023, they will headline a Japanese tour.[15]

Musical style

[edit]

Critics have categorized Sunami's music as beatdown hardcore[1][4] and metallic hardcore.[16][17] They often make use of elements of slam metal,[18] crust punk, D-beat, thrash metal[19] and death metal.[13] DSCVRD magazine writer Harry Higginson stated that "Sunami are a quintessential beatdown band with every facet of their sound turned up to the maximum, blending elements of 90s metalcore and death metal into a pummelling, animalistic brawl."[20] Revolver magazine writer Eli Enis stated that "Their hyperbolic tough-guy lyrics and stupidly heavy songs incite violence wherever they hit the stage, but crucially, it's all in the name of good fun."[21]

The band have cited influences including Suffocation, Terror, Cannibal Corpse and First Blood. Alfonso in particular has cited East Coast hip hop as important to his writing style, referencing that the biggest influence on his lyrics and vocal flows for Demonstration as Big L.[2]

Members

[edit]
  • Josef Alfonso – vocals
  • Mike "Durt" Durrett – guitars
  • Theo Dominguez – bass
  • Benny Eissmann – drums

Discography

[edit]
Albums
  • Sunami (2023)
EPs
  • Sunami (2020)
  • Sunami / Gulch (2021; split with Gulch)
  • LP Promo (2022)
Demos
  • Demonstration (2019)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Enis, Eli. "SUNAMI STYLE: FROM JOKE BAND TO BAY AREA HARDCORE LEADERS". Revolver. Retrieved August 21, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e Sunami: Bay Area Hardcore (Podcast). April 3, 2023. Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  3. ^ Vixxer, Thomas. "Sunami: Vocalist Josef Alfonso on His Love for Bay Area Hardcore + More". Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  4. ^ a b Breihan, Tom. "Stream Sunami's Stupendously Ignorant Surprise-Release Self-Titled Debut Album". Stereogum. Retrieved August 21, 2023.
  5. ^ BREIHAN, TOM. "The Month In Hardcore: November 2020". Stereogum. Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  6. ^ Sacher, Andrew. "Gulch and Sunami release split EP (listen)". Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  7. ^ Breiham, Tom. "Stream Sunami's Self-Titled Debut EP". Stereogum. Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  8. ^ Breiham, Tom. "Thousands Of People Came To See Gulch & Drain Play A Guerrilla Show This Weekend, And The Footage Is Nuts". Stereogum. Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  9. ^ Sacher, Andrew. "Watch insane footage of Gulch, Sunami, Drain, Xibalba & more in a packed San Jose parking lot". Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  10. ^ BREIHAN, TOM. "Stream Sunami's Bloodthirsty New Release 2022 Promotional Tape". Stereogum. Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  11. ^ Ramirez, Carlos. "Sound and Fury 2022 Photo Recap". Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  12. ^ "SUNAMI and SCOWL to tour Australia with SPEED". lambgoat.com. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
  13. ^ a b "HEAR SUNAMI'S PULVERIZING NEW SURPRISE ALBUM". Revolver. Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  14. ^ "No Pressure, Sunami, Pain Of Truth, and more announce Triple B Records European Takeover 2023". Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  15. ^ "Sunami announce Japan tour dates". Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  16. ^ "Sunami surprise release self-titled debut album, 'Sunami' is now streaming". Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  17. ^ Sacher, Andrew. "38 Hardcore Releases We're Anticipating in 2023". Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  18. ^ ENIS, ELI. "6 BEST NEW SONGS RIGHT NOW: 6/16/23". Revolver. Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  19. ^ Baines, Huw. "Bay Watch: Sunami". Kerrang!. Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  20. ^ HIGGINSON, HARRY. "COVER STORY: SUNAMI AND NO PRESSURE - THE NEW AGE". Retrieved August 26, 2023.
  21. ^ Enis, Eli. "5 BADASS RISING BANDS YOU NEED TO KNOW: JUNE 2023". Revolver. Retrieved August 26, 2023.