What's F'n Next? Nude Beach

By LIZ PELLY  |  January 8, 2013

wfnx_nudebeach

Chuck Betz, Ryan Naideau, and Jimmy Shelton met in high school on Long Island while playing in punk and hardcore bands like Guadalupe, Dustheads, and Religious Knives. Four years ago, they started Nude Beach, a band that drew very much from those roots, playing scuzzy rock and roll wherever they could. "We just wanted to play house shows and parties and stuff like that," explains drummer Naideau.

With their 2012 LP, II, Nude Beach grew into a more expansive sound, drawing more from the classic rock of Springsteen and Petty than their punk contemporaries did, while still proving themselves one of Brooklyn's hardest-working DIY bands, playing around the borough nearly every weekend.

The aesthetic change was mostly inspired after writing the song "Walkin' Down My Street." "That song we had written a long time ago, but it didn't really fit in with the type of music we were playing then," says Naideau. "But on our first tours, we would play that song all the time. It was kind of the transitional tune in a lot of ways. It kind of bridged the gap between our first record, which was more punky, and the second record, which was more melodic, with more hooks."

II was originally self-released, and then later re-issued by Other Music Recording Co., an imprint of Fat Possum. "Nothing was changed," adds Naideau. "It's not that different except that more people have heard it. We've made some money, so we bought a van. We were able to tour with Roky Erickson this fall."

The next record is going to be more of a "classic psychedelic-rock record," with more instrumentation and piano on a lot of the songs. "But it's all up in the air," Naideau says. "Anything could change at any moment."

LIZ PELLY »LPELLY[a]PHX.COM

NUDE BEACH :: BROOKLYN, NEW YORK :: Listen live at wfnx.net

  Topics: Music Features , Music, WFNX, What's F'n Next
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY LIZ PELLY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   COLLECTIVE THINKING @ BLANC GALLERY  |  March 06, 2013
    In 2010, a group of 20-something art and music enthusiasts transformed an unassuming basement space on Vancouver Street into YES.OUI.SI., a multi-media gallery and gathering spot for young talents that hosted dozens of visual-art shows, film screenings, literary readings, and experimental music performances.
  •   PRIMORDIAL SOUNDS’ LABEL-READY LEARNING CURVE  |  February 20, 2013
    Noah Bond's Allston apartment looks like an antique shop.
  •   BEACH FOSSILS | CLASH THE TRUTH  |  February 20, 2013
    Last year in an interview with the Phoenix , Dustin Payseur of Beach Fossils said his sophomore album would be inspired by "a lot of frustration from a lot of different sources."
  •   ICEAGE | YOU'RE NOTHING  |  February 11, 2013
    There's something intriguing about the ways Copenhagen punk band Iceage seem simultaneously to care so much and so little.
  •   BEE-HAVIOR: ''FESTOONING THE INFLATABLE BEEHIVE'' AT BU'S 808 GALLERY  |  February 06, 2013
    An art gallery may seem like an unconventional space for discussions on insect behavior, but Maria Molteni maintains beekeeping is as much an art as a science.

 See all articles by: LIZ PELLY