
Jobber To The Stars
In pro wrestling, larger-than-life characters act out good-versus-evil storylines in a heightened atmosphere. For Kate Meizner, the vocalist, guitarist, and principal songwriter for the Brooklyn sludge-pop band Jobber, the spectacle of the squared circle doubles as a way for her to process what she calls âmundane and very serious struggles under capitalism.â âIt doesnât let you wallow, but it still captures a crude version of reality,â she continues. âItâs a way to laugh so you donât scream.â Jobberâs debut full-length, Jobber to the Stars, captures that moment between a horrified yelp and a gut-busting guffaw in 11 twisty songs that cover their candied-center hooks in sweat and blood and muck, like the live-wire opener âRaw Is Warâ and the distortion-shrouded postcard from the edge âPillmanâs Got A Gun.â Itâs power pop that busts itself open to reveal gnarly, messy bits lurking within. The albumâs title plays on the bandâs nameâa wrestling term that refers to a person who âdoes the job,â or loses, in a matchâand Meiznerâs own journey over the recordâs two-plus-year genesis. âIn pro wrestling, a âjobber to the starsâ is a performer who always loses to big names, but not to total unknowns,â she says. âTheyâre good enough to make the stars look great, but never the ones pushed to the top themselves.â Meizner and her bandmatesâdrummer-vocalist Michael Falcone, guitarist-keyboardist Michael Julius, and bassist Miles Tothârecorded Jobber to the Stars with Justin Pizzoferrato (Dinosaur Jr, Body/Head, Editrix) at Sonelab in Easthampton, Massachusetts and with Aron Kobayashi Ritch (Momma, Hotline TNT, Squirrel Flower) at Studio G in Brooklyn.
Jobber To The Stars
In pro wrestling, larger-than-life characters act out good-versus-evil storylines in a heightened atmosphere. For Kate Meizner, the vocalist, guitarist, and principal songwriter for the Brooklyn sludge-pop band Jobber, the spectacle of the squared circle doubles as a way for her to process what she calls âmundane and very serious struggles under capitalism.â âIt doesnât let you wallow, but it still captures a crude version of reality,â she continues. âItâs a way to laugh so you donât scream.â Jobberâs debut full-length, Jobber to the Stars, captures that moment between a horrified yelp and a gut-busting guffaw in 11 twisty songs that cover their candied-center hooks in sweat and blood and muck, like the live-wire opener âRaw Is Warâ and the distortion-shrouded postcard from the edge âPillmanâs Got A Gun.â Itâs power pop that busts itself open to reveal gnarly, messy bits lurking within. The albumâs title plays on the bandâs nameâa wrestling term that refers to a person who âdoes the job,â or loses, in a matchâand Meiznerâs own journey over the recordâs two-plus-year genesis. âIn pro wrestling, a âjobber to the starsâ is a performer who always loses to big names, but not to total unknowns,â she says. âTheyâre good enough to make the stars look great, but never the ones pushed to the top themselves.â Meizner and her bandmatesâdrummer-vocalist Michael Falcone, guitarist-keyboardist Michael Julius, and bassist Miles Tothârecorded Jobber to the Stars with Justin Pizzoferrato (Dinosaur Jr, Body/Head, Editrix) at Sonelab in Easthampton, Massachusetts and with Aron Kobayashi Ritch (Momma, Hotline TNT, Squirrel Flower) at Studio G in Brooklyn.
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In pro wrestling, larger-than-life characters act out good-versus-evil storylines in a heightened atmosphere. For Kate Meizner, the vocalist, guitarist, and principal songwriter for the Brooklyn sludge-pop band Jobber, the spectacle of the squared circle doubles as a way for her to process what she calls âmundane and very serious struggles under capitalism.â âIt doesnât let you wallow, but it still captures a crude version of reality,â she continues. âItâs a way to laugh so you donât scream.â Jobberâs debut full-length, Jobber to the Stars, captures that moment between a horrified yelp and a gut-busting guffaw in 11 twisty songs that cover their candied-center hooks in sweat and blood and muck, like the live-wire opener âRaw Is Warâ and the distortion-shrouded postcard from the edge âPillmanâs Got A Gun.â Itâs power pop that busts itself open to reveal gnarly, messy bits lurking within. The albumâs title plays on the bandâs nameâa wrestling term that refers to a person who âdoes the job,â or loses, in a matchâand Meiznerâs own journey over the recordâs two-plus-year genesis. âIn pro wrestling, a âjobber to the starsâ is a performer who always loses to big names, but not to total unknowns,â she says. âTheyâre good enough to make the stars look great, but never the ones pushed to the top themselves.â Meizner and her bandmatesâdrummer-vocalist Michael Falcone, guitarist-keyboardist Michael Julius, and bassist Miles Tothârecorded Jobber to the Stars with Justin Pizzoferrato (Dinosaur Jr, Body/Head, Editrix) at Sonelab in Easthampton, Massachusetts and with Aron Kobayashi Ritch (Momma, Hotline TNT, Squirrel Flower) at Studio G in Brooklyn.











