
Stuffed & Ready
After releasing 2016’s critically acclaimed 'Apocalipstick,' Cherry Glazerr spent the next 18 months touring the world on their own steam. Between DIY All Ages venues, rock clubs, large festival stages, and massive theaters with some of the world’s best and most beloved bands (The Pixies, Flaming Lips, Slowdive, and The Breeders, among others), the band has really only stopped to work on their follow up, 'Stuffed & Ready.' While furiously building the band’s sound and ideas, front person Clem Creevy enlisted Carlos de La Garza to be the band’s studio co-collaborator as they evolved the songs and refined the recordings.
Leading her thorny rock trio, Clementine Creevy keeps her themes broad and her anger specific as she reflects this moment’s feelings and fatigue.
More inward-looking than their previous records, the alternative rockers’ raucous new album is a soul-searching triumph
With its gnarly riffs and big, dark, emotionally weighty numbers, there’s something claustrophobic about its vibe.
LA noisemakers Cherry Glazerr have been carving out their own space since Clementine Creevy was in her teens. And there’s so much of that spirit in Stuffed & Ready, you can almost smell it.
The party's over for Cherry Glazerr. Originally started as an outlet for lo-fi musings on cats and grilled cheese, frontwoman Clementine Cre...
Prior to now, Clementine Creevy and her Cherry Glazerr crew were just hanging out. 2017's Apocalipstick eschewed formal honesty for situational slacking-the slow-blooming feminist, escapades in the kitchen, dirty underwear worn three days in a row. Good t
The steadfast consistency of Clementine Creevy has always been the centre-point of Cherry Glazerr’s success. The always-changing lineup has never
'Stuffed & Ready' by Cherry Glazerr, album review by Justin Bieggar. The Los Angeles band's full-length is out today via Secretly Canadian.
There’s not enough contrast on the LA band’s album of intensely felt songs about everything from not fitting in to toxic masculinity