Silkworm, the Missoula, Montana, indie-rock band based by Andy Cohen, Joel RL Phelps, and Tim Midyett within the Nineteen Eighties, are reuniting. In a brand new interview on the Kreative Kontrol podcast with Vish Khanna, Cohen and Midyett revealed {that a} reconfigured lineup with Phelps, who left in 1994, will reunite to play a number of exhibits this September. They are going to be Silkworm’s first correct exhibits since breaking apart in 2005, after the death of drummer Michael Dahlquist.
“There’s an excellent probability that we’ll be enjoying a pair exhibits in September with Joel, and Matt [Kadane] will likely be enjoying keyboards—from Bedhead, who performed within the latter day interval of the ’worm,” Midyett stated on the podcast. “So, it’ll sort of be an alternate historical past ’Worm, the place Joel by no means left, and Matt was within the band, and we met Jeff Pananall as an alternative of Michael [Dahlquist].” A Chicago live performance is scheduled for September 25, and a set at Memphis’ Goner Fest will happen on September 27.
Technically, Silkworm held an impromptu reunion final yr to play at a memorial gathering for the late Steve Albini, their buddy and frequent collaborator, in Zion, Illinois. Cohen, Midyett, and Phelps performed a number of Silkworm songs with Songs: Ohia drummer Jeff Panall—who will even be a part of the lineup for the upcoming Silkworm exhibits—in honor of Albini.
Silkworm launched their ninth and last studio album, It’ll Be Cool, in 2004. That following yr, Dahlquist and two pals—the Dials’ Douglas Meis and Returnables’ John Glick—had been killed in a automotive crash when their car was rammed from behind by a automotive going 90 miles per hour. Cohen and Midyett had relocated to Chicago at that time and, after grieving, began the band Bottomless Pit collectively. In 2013, the documentary Couldn’t You Wait? The Story of Silkworm got here out that includes interviews with Albini, Stephen Malkmus, Jeff Tweedy, and extra musicians.