Coldwave, EBM, and Hard Techno: NYC's Industrial Underground Claims the Night
The summer heat is rising, but the city's underbelly remains ice-cold as a massive wave of darkwave, EBM, and heavy modular electronics descends upon New York this week. First up, Littlefield hosts a masterclass in sinister frequencies. Patriarchy will bring their visceral, transgressive brand of industrial performance art, flanked by Brooklyn's own EBM royalty Light Asylum and the glacial coldwave of Coatie Pop. This is heavy body music at its most primal—demanding sweat, smoke, and absolute submission to the rhythm.
The gothic momentum carries straight into Friday night at Webster Hall with a stacked bill headlined by Twin Tribes. The Texas duo continues to dominate the dark music landscape, delivering a live experience defined by soaring, melancholic post-punk guitars and propulsive analog drum machines. They are joined by Riki's icy, highly-stylized synthpop and the heavy-set, crushing EBM of Dancing Plague, making this an essential pilgrimage for anyone who prefers their dancefloors shrouded in thick fog and blinding strobes.
If your tastes lean more toward pure modular destruction and breakneck tempos, Saturday offers a brutal fork in the road. At a TBA Secret Loft Location, Swedish experimental pioneer Peder Mannerfelt is set to unleash his trademark brand of chaotic, modular acid techno alongside the broken-beat mutations of LWS and Sobolik. If you want something raw and clinical, head over to Paragon, where Detroit In Effect and Huey Mnemonic will be spinning high-speed ghettotech and classic Detroit electro that will shake the venue's concrete foundations to their absolute core.
