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DEAFDEAFDEAF + Whitehorse + The Black Ravines

  • Date: 14/03/2025
  • Time:2025/03/14 20:00
  • Location: Hull, East Yorkshire
  • Venue: The New Adelphi Club89 De Grey Street, Hull, HU5 2RU
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DEAFDEAFDEAF
+ Whitehorse
+ The Black Ravines
The New Adelphi Club
Friday 14th March 2025
Tickets £8 Adv Click Here
Doors: 8.00pm

DEAFDEAFDEAF
‘A mile away from the average indie b*llocks and a marker for the Next Next Wave. DEAFDEAFDEAF cement their place in the rich vaults of Manc music with their own twist of subnormal soundscapes.’ – Louder Than War.

‘The Band perfectly executes a range of dynamic levels, knowing just when to throw an abundant amount of harsh noise at you resulting in an all more powerful feeling of intensity.’ – SPEW.

‘Touching on all of the unsettling emotions typically found in the melancholy genre, DEAFDEAFDEAF refuse to shy away from the truth.’ – Gigwise.

‘Comparative to the records, the live set exhibits chaos and intensity that has to be experienced firsthand to truly appreciate the immense talents of DEAFDEAFDEAF’ – VOICE ‘DEAFDEAFDEAF have carved for themselves. Undefinable by genre, yet akin to influence, the boys have really pulled together an impressive roster of tracks – especially this early on in their career. Notably building a name for themselves in the live music industry as one to watch, they have a certain grace in creating atmosphere and forging chaos in even the most unconventional of spaces.’ – YUCK

WHITEHORSE
Selling out their first show in Manchester before even announcing their existence as a band, former frontman of The Blinders, Thomas Haywood, begins the inevitable next chapter with new outfit Whitehorse. The band was formed in Sheffield along with John McCullagh, Bobby Glaister, Nathan Keeble, and James Keith.
Sonically they walk a tightrope, sitting somewhere between careful musical arrangement and an underlying visceral energy that could be forward-rolled into at
any moment. Self-described as “dark and stormy like the drink”, the name Whitehorse was inspired by “what happens to the sea when it comes into shore.”