Milk at Midnight

Location:
CHICAGO, Illinois, US
Type:
Artist / Band / Musician
Genre:
Indie / Rock / Experimental
Site(s):
Label:
Stars/No Stars Records
Type:
Indie
Stars/No Stars is pleased to welcome the newest member of the family, Chicago's Milk at Midnight. Their SNS debut is the band's third release, and their most ambitious to date. Less Love More Acid is the sound of the American Dream as seen through a bad trip.It's an argument to end the world.It's apple pie and riot gear. Danny Doom (vocals, guitar), Rick Nitz (guitar, bass, vocals), and Eric Anderson (drums, vocals) provide a soundtrack for the end of the Bush years and your next party as well. Stars/No Stars is pleased to introduce the newest member of the family with a whole new twist to our digital distribution - high fidelity 24 bit WAV files are now included on a data CD for folks that purchase the vinyl. Not into LPs? No prob. We got 192kbps MP3s ready for download.



Buy it at starsnostars.com, iTunes, CD baby, Amazon, Reckless Records, Permanent Records, and more!



MaM has also released a full-length record "A Fit to End All Time," and a 6-song EP, "Letter Bombs and Holidays." Long out of print, these two will be available soon through iTunes and many other digital download outlets!



"Less Love More Acid"



"Milk At Midnight’s third release, Less Love More Acid (Stars/No Stars) finds the trio alternating between heart-stirring indie pop (”Sticks In My Stomach”), Killers danceability (”Kristol Ball”), and bombast worthy of Muse (the title track). “The Leaning Tower Of Astigmatism” opens with a riff that’s a little bit country and a little bit “Big Bird In Japan,” while “Lost Highway” drowns in a cacophony of psychedelia. Rarely does an album’s full track listing consist of must-hear ditties, but here’s a perfect dozen."



– Janine Schaults, Illinois Entertainer



"Locals’ Less Love More Acid offers bad advice but plenty of plaintive, impressive indie rock tunes."



- Chicago Tribune/Red Eye/Metromix



"The charming and sonically affable local outfit Milk at Midnight celebrates the release of “Less Love More Acid” (Stars/No Stars Records) tonight, the trio’s second full-length. The classic-rock-inspired indie pop bounces along in an even more psychedelic way this time around, but not at the expense of the band’s endearing youthfulness and tendency to lean towards the dramatic. But the ability to pull off both a dark-edged indie-rock song like “Kristol Ball” and an acoustic-guitar-led song like “Sticks in My Stomach” is impressive; the album’s title track, probably the best song of the collection, has a driving intensity that could for sure inspire a room."



—Tom Lynch, New City Chicago



"Milk At Midnight experimented with mixing Appalachian mountain-man touches to thundering rock rhythms on their last EP, and the new album sees them taking that aesthetic and expanding it over a number of new songs. One of the most interesting things about the band is the inner conflict they seem to be constantly fighting when it comes to what the band's sounds should be. Singer-guitarist Danny Doom wants to write classic rock epic protest songs, but the interplay between his and Rick Nitz's guitars creates tapestries that suck you in just as Eric Anderson's thundering drums threaten to bounce you right back out again. The band's sound shifts, darts, and defies pigeonholing. This is a band that would sound right in place touring econo in 1984 as they would opening for Pearl Jam in 1994 or putting on a psychedelic lightshow at Metro in 2009."



—Tankboy, Chicagoist.com



"Despite their name, locals Milk at Midnight don’t aim to be particularly soothing and sleep inducing. These guys sound a little pushy, like somebody at a bar who’s oblivious to your personal space, but if you can forgive that you’re in for some fun: their third album, Less Love More Acid (Stars/No Stars), fully embraces both stiff-legged Napoleon Dynamite geekery and blitzing hard-rock riffs."



—Monica Kendrick, Chicago Reader



“Local favorites Milk at Midnight play stirring, driving, rock epics with a touch of glam, channeling equal parts Led Zeppelin and the Flaming Lips. On their latest EP, Letter Bombs and Holidays, guitarist Danny Doom, bassist Nick Ritz, and drummer Eric Ander$in constantly alternate instrumental and vocal duties while successfully utilizing the banjo, seamlessly mixing its twang into their crashing, fuzzy guitars and stripping it of its usual alt-country connotations — not an easy feat.”



- Flavorpill (chi.flavorpill.net)



"The Flaming Lips meet The White Stripes meet Led Zeppelin is probably the best way to describe the distinctive sound that permeates Milk at Midnight's self-released EP, 'Letter Bombs and Holidays.' They go from moody and droning on the opening number ('The Boy That No One Knows') to playful and light on the ever-so-mysterious bonus track. Other standouts include the Cure cover '10:15 Saturday Night' and the classic rock meets indie rock of 'Satellite.'"



- Dean Ramos Illinois Entertainer, November 2005



Check out the MilkTube website for the latest videos!



(http://www.youtube.com/MilkatMidnight)



"Sticks in My Stomach"
0.02 follow us on Twitter      Contact      Privacy Policy      Terms of Service
Copyright © BANDMINE // All Right Reserved
Return to top