THE SEAFLOOR CINEMA - SELF-TITLED ALBUM OUT NOW

US TOUR THIS DECEMBER

Sacramento, California's The Seafloor Cinema has released their brand new self-titled album The Seafloor Cinema, today via Pure Noise Records. The record is available to listen to in full - HERE. To celebrate the release the band has released a new single 'Dolly Parton Vs The Government'.

Listen to the track HERE 

3rd December 2023 - New Brookland Tavern Columbia SC
4th December 2023 - Center Stage Atlanta GA
5th December 2023 - Canal Club Richmond VA
6 December 2023 - Mohawk Place Buffalo, NY
7 December 2023 - The Meadows Kingsland, NY
8 December 2023 - House of Independents Asbury Park, NJ
9 December 2023 - Webster Underground HartFord, CT
11 December 2023 - Underground Arts Philadelphia, PA
12 December 2023 - The Loving Touch Ferndale, MI
13 December 2023 - Bottom Lounge Chicago, IL
14 December 2023 - X-Ray Arcade Cudahy, WI
15 December 2023 - Fine Line Minneapolis, MN
17 December 2023 - Old Rock House St Louis, MO
19 December 2023- Summit Music Hall, Denver CO
20 December 2023- Kilby Court Salt Lake City UT
21 December 2023- Soul Belly BBQ, Las Vegas NV

Tickets on sale now - HERE

The Seafloor Cinema is supporting Andres from the 16th of November until the 5th of December before heading out with Craig Owens on his upcoming US tour this December. The remaining dates are below.

There’s very little THE SEAFLOOR CINEMA haven’t tried in their seven years as a band, swirling hypnotic math-rock, pulsing EDM, soaring pop choruses, and sparkly Midwest emo together into a turbo-charged, buoyant sound that embodies the modern playlist generation. But on their self-titled third album, the Sacramento-based trio try a new role on for size: one more than ever before, unapologetically themselves.

“Our only real goal for this record was to make something that truly encompassed us as songwriters and as people,” vocalist Justin Murry says. “On our last album, we tried to bring out the pop side of our band a little bit more, and we definitely succeeded at that. This time, we wanted to see how far down each road we could take it: as poppy as possible, yeah, but also as heavy and technical and eccentric as possible.”

Funded by a jaw-dropping $20,000 Kickstarter campaign, The Seafloor Cinema’s Pure Noise debut, 2021’s In Cinemascope With Stereophonic Sound, established the band – Murry, guitarist Seth Lawrenson and drummer Timothy Aldama – as a force to be reckoned with in the underground, but THE SEAFLOOR CINEMA finds them upping their game in even more enthralling, epic ways, shattering the ceiling of what’s possible with their skyscraping musical Jenga tower.

First single “If This Were A Film,” hailed by Lawrenson as “a throwback song that also sounds nothing like that’s come before it,” explodes with a kinetic prog-rock urgency and elastic hook, while “The Lesson (.44 Magnum),” featuring Of Mice & Men vocalist Aaron Pauley, crescendos with new wave synths and skittering electronics before swerving into a caustic hardcore breakdown. It’s the sound of a race act who can do it all with ease, capable of harnessing the visceral emotion of Taking Back Sunday’s “Cute Without The ‘E’” and the dextrous musicality of Coheed and Cambria’s “A Favor House Atlantic” (two songs they perfected traveling as part of the Emo Night tour) as they empty the playbook into an ultra-sleek, hyper-modern sound sure to push the genre – well, genres – forward.

Working with Saosin guitarist Beau Burchell (Senses Fail, Underoath) for the first time, the band brought some three dozen ideas to the studio, mining both their love of Swancore, uptempo indie rock, Japanese pop music and speed metal and the personal soul-searching that has colored their last few years as individuals.
On the new album, the band said "This record really feels like “us”. It's as crazy, technical, pretty, soft, and heavy as we wanted it to be. We left the studio with Beau Burchell (Saosin) feeling like we really captured a record that described us as musicians, as people, and as friends. Beau Burchell really helped guide us in a direction that helped us capture the sounds in our heads. He made sure our personalities were seen and heard within the music he captured."