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Meatbodies
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Meatbodies is an American psychedelic rock band, formed in 2011 in Los Angeles, California by Chad Ubovich. The band is currently composed of Chad Ubovich, Dylan Fujioka, Noah Guevara, and Casey Hanson.[1]
Key Information
History
[edit]Formation and Meatbodies (2011–2014)
[edit]Prior to forming Meatbodies, Chad Ubovich occupied the role of bass guitarist for the Mikal Cronin band and went on tour with Ty Segall as he toured his studio album, Goodbye Bread (2011).[2] Ubovich soon switched to guitar within the band and toured with Cronin for the next five years.
While touring, Ubovich began working on the songs that would become the band's debut album, Meatbodies (2014).
Going under the moniker Chad and the Meatbodies, he supported different acts around Los Angeles including Ty Segall and Charles Moothart's hard rock band Fuzz, which he would later join. Segall subsequently encouraged Ubovich to record his music and offered to release it on his label, God? Records. The resultant self-titled cassette, Chad and the Meatbodies, sold out its initial run.
Very soon after, the band caught the attention of In the Red Records, and was sent out to record their debut studio album with producer Eric Bauer.
Ubovich, brought on a plethora of musicians to record the album including: Ty Segall, Cory Hanson, Erik Jiminez, and Ryley Youngdahl. All of whom had previously performed at one point as the Chad and The Meatbodies band.
The album was mixed by producer/engineer Chris Woodhouse, and the band changed their name simply to Meatbodies. The album was released in 2014.
Alice (2015–2017)
[edit]After touring their debut album, Chad Ubovich began writing and touring with Fuzz. During this time he began creating material for Meatbodies’ second album Alice (2017) . Ubovich stated : “A lot of the concepts on this album started while I was on the road with Fuzz, and there was a lot of crazy stuff going on at the time.” [3] “I’m talking politically, socially, and worldly. There were a lot of things going on when we made that album, and then when we went on the road with that album, there was even more going on. It was crazy, just watching the news all the time. I just wanted to say something about it, and started conceptualizing this story. I knew I wanted to make a story, or a loose story at least.” [4]
Ubovich utilized some of the members of the rotating live band at the time to write and record these concepts including : Patrick Nolan, Kevin Boog, and once again, Erik Jiminez. The album was recorded for a second time at The Bauer Mansion with Eric Bauer in San Francisco. This time being self produced and mixed by Ubovich himself.
Alice is described as a "loose concept album".[5] Ubovich has stated: “Alice is a theory. It's a made-up concept. It's almost like made-up scripture.”[6] The album was released in 2017, although was recorded a year prior, but the release was pushed back due to technical discrepancies with the length of the vinyl. Resulting in the opening track The Burning Fields being left off the vinyl and kept only online and on CD.
333 (2018–2021)
[edit]333 is the third album from Meatbodies. It is technically an EP. The recordings were done in Chad Ubovich's bedroom with long time friend and drummer Dylan Fujioka, best known for work with Upsilon Acrux, and Chelsea Wolfe. The songs were part of a batch of demos for an unreleased album that got its production halted due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In its place, 333 was released until further production could be made. Regarding the recording process Ubovich stated : “We were actually demoing for another album.” [7] “We had a drum kit set up in my room with my tape machine and a lot of the songs that are on 333 are those songs. They were kind of put off to the side, and I didn’t listen back until the pandemic was going on. I found them and was like, oh shit, this is pretty cool; let’s make this something.” [8]
Flora Ocean Tiger Bloom (2023–present)
[edit]On December 7, Meatbodies announced their fourth album (third overall) Flora Ocean Tiger Bloom, which was released on March 8, 2024. Tour dates for the US were also announced for 2024.
Discography
[edit]Studio albums
- Meatbodies (2014)
- Alice (2017)
- 333 (2021)
- Flora Ocean Tiger Bloom (2024)
Singles
- Chad and The Meatbodies (2013, cassette)
- Wahoo / Steps (2014)
- Meatbodies / Wand – Void (2014)
- Mud Gals (2014)
- Valley Girl / Hibernation (2016)
References
[edit]- ^ Kaye, Ben (February 23, 2016). "Meatbodies announce new 7-inch single, share A-side "Valley Girl" – listen". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
- ^ Thomas-Hansard, Artemis. "Meatbodies' Chad Ubovich Got Dark on His Debut Album". laweekly.com. Retrieved November 20, 2015.
- ^ "Meatbodies Show Us the Power of Pure Psychedelia on 'Alice'". Observer. February 13, 2017. Retrieved December 13, 2022.
- ^ "Meatbodies Show Us the Power of Pure Psychedelia on 'Alice'". Observer. February 13, 2017. Retrieved December 13, 2022.
- ^ Salmon, Ben. "'Evolving in Weird Ways'". Inlander. Retrieved December 13, 2022.
- ^ Salmon, Ben. "'Evolving in Weird Ways'". Inlander. Retrieved December 13, 2022.
- ^ "Interview: Meatbodies Vocalist, Guitarist Chad Ubovich On Band Evolution, New LP, '333'". New Noise Magazine. Retrieved December 13, 2022.
- ^ "Interview: Meatbodies Vocalist, Guitarist Chad Ubovich On Band Evolution, New LP, '333'". New Noise Magazine. Retrieved December 13, 2022.
Meatbodies
View on GrokipediaBand members
Current members
As of 2025, Meatbodies' active lineup comprises Chad Ubovich (lead vocals, guitar, primary songwriter), Dylan Fujioka (drums), Noah Guevara (bass), and Casey Hanson (guitar, backing vocals).[8][9] This configuration has driven the band's live performances, including their 2025 European tour and North American dates supporting releases like Flora Ocean Tiger Bloom (2024).[10][1] Ubovich, the project's founder since 2011, handles core songwriting and frontman duties, with Fujioka providing rhythmic foundation as a longtime collaborator on recordings and stage.[4][11] Guevara and Hanson solidify the touring unit's sound, as evidenced in sessions and appearances documented by the band's label, In the Red Records, and public broadcasts.[12][4]Former members
Cory Hanson contributed guitar and backing vocals to Meatbodies' self-titled debut album, recorded in 2013 and released in 2014, alongside frontman Chad Ubovich.[2] Erik Jimenez played drums on the same album, drawing from his experience in related garage rock circles.[2] [13] Riley Youngdahl handled bass duties during these early sessions, helping establish the band's raw psychedelic sound.[2] For the follow-up album Alice in 2017, Patrick Nolan joined on guitar, supporting live tours and recordings during the mid-2010s period.[2] Ryan Moutinho provided drums for the Alice era, including associated promotions and performances.[2] Killian LeDuke contributed bass during this phase, reflecting the band's transitional lineup flux amid Ubovich's parallel commitments to projects like Fuzz.[2] These collaborators departed post-Alice tour, paving the way for subsequent personnel changes documented in later discography credits.[2]Musical style and influences
Core elements
Meatbodies' core sound centers on overdriven guitars delivering chugging riffs and pounding drums that propel a sludgy, high-energy assault, as demonstrated in "Disorder" from their 2014 self-titled debut album, where the track's incessant riff and driving drum pattern establish a raw, propulsive foundation.[14][15] This sonic framework consistently integrates hook-laden pop melodies amid noise rock dissonance and fuzz-laden distortion, prioritizing unpolished analog recording techniques over sanitized digital production for a gritty, visceral texture evident across their output.[3][6] Lyrically, Ubovich explores recurring motifs of disorder—depicting entrapment and mental chaos—and hybridity, reflecting unvarnished personal struggles such as internal conflict and ritualistic coping without narrative embellishment, as in the titular "Disorder" and later "Hybrid Feelings."[16][17][18]Evolution across albums
The self-titled debut album established Meatbodies' foundation in raw garage-psych, characterized by unrelenting electric guitar assaults, feedback-drenched noise, and abrupt shifts from minimalist acoustics to sludgy distortion, evoking proto-punk energy over refined structures.[19][15] This noise-dominant approach prioritized visceral intensity through basic rock instrumentation—guitar, bass, drums—eschewing electronic elements or glossy production in favor of analog grit.[13] Subsequent work on Alice introduced progressive and metal-infused layers, expanding song lengths with extended jams that blended fuzzed proto-metal riffs and saccharine melodies, drawing from influences like Rush's technical sprawl while maintaining psych-rock core.[20][21] Tonal dynamics grew more varied, incorporating glam-tinged psychedelia and clashing metallic textures, yet the band rejected contemporary polished trends, adhering to unadorned instrumentation for causal drive over synthetic augmentation.[22] The 333 phase shifted toward introspective minimalism, stripping arrangements to lo-fi guitar scuzz, raw acoustic bursts, and sparse primitive electronics, reflecting a pared-back production that emphasized emotional rawness over expansive layering.[23][24] This evolution favored bedroom-recorded simplicity, reducing noise volume to highlight hybrid feelings through fewer elements, distinct from prior bombast but aligned with foundational rock purism.[25] Flora Ocean Tiger Bloom marked a melodic expansion, incorporating hookier structures and anthemic bravado with sludgy metal rolls alongside cohesive psych-rock flows, empirically tied to sobriety-driven recovery that enabled broader dynamic range without diluting instrumental authenticity.[11][6] Production refinements, including varied riffing and reinvention motifs, shifted from earlier dominance of chaos to balanced tension-release cycles, while steadfastly avoiding electronic polish or trend-chasing for first-principles rock heft.[26][27]History
Formation and debut album (2011–2014)
Meatbodies was formed in 2011 in Los Angeles, California, by guitarist and vocalist Chad Ubovich, who sought an outlet for his original songwriting separate from his roles in other projects like Mikal Cronin and FUZZ amid the California garage rock revival.[28][2] Initially operating as Chad and the Meatbodies, the band self-released a cassette EP titled Chad and the Meatbodies in early 2013 on Ty Segall's God? Records imprint, featuring tracks like "Tremmors" that showcased Ubovich's raw, fuzz-driven sound; the limited run sold out rapidly, generating initial interest in the local underground scene.[29][30] Building on this momentum, Ubovich entered the studio with Ty Segall and engineer Chris Woodhouse to record the band's debut full-length album, refining the project's noisy, psychedelic garage aesthetic.[29] The self-titled Meatbodies LP, comprising 10 tracks including "The Archer," "Disorder," and "Mountain," was released on October 14, 2014, via In the Red Records, which had signed the band after noticing Ubovich's grinding style.[19][31] Preceding the album, the band issued the single "Wahoo/Steps" in 2014, further previewing its abrasive energy.[32] Early tours and live shows in 2013–2014, often alongside Bay Area psych and garage acts, helped cultivate buzz within the indie rock circuit and solidified the lineup around Ubovich's dominant creative vision, establishing Meatbodies as a key player in the revivalist scene despite Ubovich's multi-band commitments.[28][33]Alice period (2015–2017)
In 2016, Meatbodies released the single "Hibernation," which previewed the glam and psychedelic leanings of their forthcoming sophomore album, featuring layered guitar textures and melodic hooks that diverged from the raw garage aggression of their 2014 self-titled debut.[34] This track, paired with "Valley Girl" on a split single, signaled a shift toward more expansive, trippy song structures influenced by 1970s glam rock elements reminiscent of T. Rex, while retaining fuzz-driven psych-rock foundations.[35] The band entered the studio to record Alice, their second full-length album, which was released on February 10, 2017, via In the Red Records, a label closely associated with Ty Segall's network and known for amplifying garage and psych acts in the Los Angeles scene.[36] Production emphasized a fuller band sound with increased psychedelic textures and metallic psych elements, as heard in singles like "Creature Feature" and "Haunted History," which blended groovy riffs, snarling vocals, and sprawling arrangements for a more melodic and hook-oriented approach compared to the debut's sparky tenacity.[37][38][21] To enhance live energy, the lineup incorporated new bassist Kevin Boog, allowing for tighter, more dynamic performances that supported the album's evolved style.[34] The Alice cycle marked expanded touring, with the band playing 62 shows in 2017 alone, including festival appearances at Echo Park Rising in August and Festerval in November, alongside a KEXP session in February that showcased tracks like "Kings" and "Gyre."[39][40] These efforts, bolstered by connections to Segall's collaborative ecosystem, boosted visibility in underground psych circuits, bridging the debut's raw edge toward deeper introspection in subsequent works without yet encountering major disruptions.[41]333 era and challenges (2018–2021)
The Meatbodies' third release, 333, emerged from a period marked by personal and external disruptions, culminating in its September 3, 2021, issuance via In the Red Records.[42][43] Recorded primarily in frontman Chad Ubovich's bedroom with longtime collaborator Jessica Nelson, the album blends guitar distortion, acoustic elements, and rudimentary electronics, capturing a transition from substance-fueled haze to sobriety.[44] This pivot influenced the songwriting, with lyrics empirically reflecting sobriety's trials, as evidenced in tracks exploring internal conflict and emergence from darkness.[24] Development of 333 spanned 2018 to 2021, interrupted by Ubovich's commitments to side projects and the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, which halted progress during its initial waves.[44] The era's themes of obscured identities—"Night Time Hidden Faces"—and amalgamated emotions—"Hybrid Feelings"—mirror pandemic-induced isolation and Ubovich's introspective reckoning with addiction's aftermath.[44] Despite these gaps, the band's resilience manifested in completing the EP-length project amid minimal live activity; touring remained sparse until a U.S. run announced for September 2021, post-release.[45] Critical reception noted 333's raw intensity as a stylistic evolution, diverging from prior fuzz-heavy outings toward more primitive, bedroom-recorded introspection, underscoring the challenges' role in forging a candid sonic hybridity.[43] This phase tested the band's continuity, with Ubovich's sobriety arc providing a causal throughline to the material's unfiltered authenticity, distinct from earlier escapist vibes.[24]Flora Ocean Tiger Bloom and recovery (2022–present)
Meatbodies released their fourth studio album, Flora Ocean Tiger Bloom, on March 8, 2024, through In the Red Records.[46] [47] The record, which had been largely completed years earlier, faced significant delays due to frontman Chad Ubovich's health challenges, including a medically induced coma that ultimately enabled him to finalize the mixing and overdubs.[7] Lyrically, the album explores themes of sobriety, redemption, and physical reinvention, reflecting Ubovich's personal struggles following a debilitating incident that required him to relearn walking and guitar playing.[48] [46] These elements mark a shift toward melodic, hook-driven psych-rock, contrasting earlier fuzz-heavy works while maintaining the band's raw energy. Singles preceding the full release included "Hole" in December 2023 and "Billow" in February 2024, the latter featuring propulsive riffs and tambourine-driven grooves evocative of 1990s alternative rock.[49] [50] [51] Post-release activities underscored the band's recovery and operational resilience. Meatbodies performed a live session for KEXP on April 11, 2024, showcasing tracks like "The Assignment" and "Silly Cybin" from the album.[12] Additional U.S. shows, such as at Teragram Ballroom in Los Angeles on October 8, 2024, demonstrated sustained touring capacity amid Ubovich's ongoing sobriety and health management since emerging from recovery around 2022.[52] [53] These efforts signal a stabilization phase, with the album's completion tied directly to Ubovich's post-coma clarity rather than external production factors.[7]Discography
Studio albums
Meatbodies released its self-titled debut studio album on October 14, 2014, through In the Red Records, featuring 10 tracks.[32][54] The second album, Alice, followed on February 10, 2017, also via In the Red Records and comprising 8 tracks.[55][56] 333, the third studio album, was issued on September 3, 2021, by In the Red Records.[44][42] The fourth album, Flora Ocean Tiger Bloom, appeared on March 8, 2024, under the same label as a double LP.[6][47]| Title | Release date | Label | Tracks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Meatbodies | October 14, 2014 | In the Red Records | 10 |
| Alice | February 10, 2017 | In the Red Records | 8 |
| 333 | September 3, 2021 | In the Red Records | 8 |
| Flora Ocean Tiger Bloom | March 8, 2024 | In the Red Records | 15 |
