Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Bethlehem Steel (band)

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Years active
  
2012–present

Record label
  
Miscreant Records

Genres
  
Indie rock, Shoegazing

Labels
  
Miscreant Records

Albums
  
Grow Up, Docking

Bethlehem Steel (band) httpsiytimgcomvi160K3QwS5rgmaxresdefaultjpg

Associated acts
  
Cold Sweats Stringer Titus Andronicus Comfy Pleistoscene Paul's Grandfather

Members
  
Rebecca Ryskalczyk Jon Gernhart Patrick Ronayne

Past members
  
Zephyr Prusinski Peter Katz

Origin
  
Brooklyn, New York City, New York, United States

Bethlehem Steel is an indie rock band from Brooklyn, New York, formed in 2012. The band is composed of singer-guitarist Rebecca Ryskalczyk, bassist Patrick Ronayne (originally Zephyr Prusinski) and drummer Jon Gernhart. Bethlehem Steel has described their band as at first "our sound was a lot softer, through the anger of everything, we were able to transform the sound of the band.” In 2016 they were named as one of 14 bands that impressed at South by Southwest. Bethlehem Steel has been known for playing the party game Ninja, which was the basis of one of their singles music videos. They have previously toured with Cold Sweats, Stringer and Pleistoscene.

Contents

History

Becca Ryskalczyk, Jon Gernhart, and Zephyr Prusinski were part of a closely knit music community while students at SUNY Fredonia, and SUNY Purchase (Zephyr Prusinski). They had played in separate bands, but knew each other well just from spending time in similar circles. Through performances at house shows and the bar and club scene of Buffalo, there were enough places for developing musicians to flourish in Western New York.

Gernhart and Ryskalczyk established a friendship that lead them to Brooklyn upon graduation. Of their Fredonia music community, they were the only two from their group of friends who ended up relocating southern to Brooklyn: where they continued to become close-knit while working on their musical ambitions. Gernhart ended up working in sound engineering, while Buffalo native Ryskalczyk took her time finding her place in the city. She was a nanny before fully immersing herself in the New York City music scene.

The original trio decided to call themselves Bethlehem Steel. In explaining why, Ryskalczyk stated "It's a good way to stay connected to the industrial cities from which they all hail originally." Additionally, paying tribute to her hometown prevented Ryskalczyk from feeling as though she was abandoning her past.

Style

After seeing them at SXSW, Robin Hilton of NPR's All Songs Considered described their sound as "gloriously loud fuzzy rock." All Songs Considered featured the band's song “Yeah, I’m Okay With My Shit Life.” Hilton went on saying that there's been lot of comparisons between Generation X and the Millennials over the years, they’re exactly the same, nothing’s changed. He expanded, "The complaint about Gen Xer's were they’re lazy and don’t care. They’re the whatever generation. And I felt like when I was watching a lot of the younger bands at South by this year I really felt like that vibe is coming back. The whatever rock, and I loved it." Bob Boilen and Robin Hilton coined the genre name of 'Whatever Rock'/Shrug Rock, naming Bethlehem Steel as their source.

In 2016, Bethlehem Steel was also named by USA Today's FTW!Culture writer Nate Scott as one of 14 bands that impressed at SXSW. Scott labeled their sound as moody and ethereal.Stereogum writers awarded the band with the yearbook style superlative of "Most Likely to Tell it How it Is." The Village Voice wrote: "Even though Bethlehem Steel's music retains some lo-fi elements and a punk ethos, the foundation built for a bigger, more accessible sound is a sturdy one."

Nick Sessanna of Buffalo based music source, Buffablog, explained Bethlehem Steel: "Try to imagine Waxahatchee fronting Pinkerton-era Weezer for a second… If that’s too obscure, other comparisons could be drawn to buzzing indie queens Courtney Barnett, Colleen Green, or even Rochester’s Pleistocene."

Songs

One Giant Fuck MachineDocking · 2015
Yeah - I'm Okay with My Shit LifeDocking · 2015
An Unexpected JurgensDocking · 2015

References

Bethlehem Steel (band) Wikipedia