Sean Gospel & The Nightstalkers
Gig Seeker Pro

Sean Gospel & The Nightstalkers

Fullerton, CA | Established. Jan 01, 2014 | INDIE

Fullerton, CA | INDIE
Established on Jan, 2014
Band Rock Garage Rock

Calendar

This band has not uploaded any videos
This band has not uploaded any videos

Music

Press


"Introducing Sean Gospel"

As a founding member of The Gospels as well as independent label Ghoulhouse Records, Sean Gospel is on a rock and roll warpath.
His debut full length,Good Times With Bad Acid is a thrilling garage rock slug-fest. One moment we are in the arms of pure 70s rock grime with songs likeWitchandBlack Car, and the next, stilled by his haunting falsetto on tracks likeTila Nook.
This is a record that will find obvious favour with fans of The Stooges, Oblivians and Ty Segall, Good Times With Bad Acid is available April 7th on Ghoulhouse Records. - The Mad Mackerel (England)


"Garage Rock Slug-Fest…..Meet Sean Gospel"

The first thing that grabbed me about Sean Gospel’s full-length debut “Good Times with Bad Acid” was the distorted sonic rage of the lead-off track “Witch”. Well, okay I guess that’s not entirely true, I did notice the ski-mask, but we’re talking about the music.

Anyway, by the time I got to “Black Car” I was all in. Released on cassette from Ghoulhouse Records – straight outta California, GTWBA is a 10-song fuzzed-out garage rock and roll blowout. This is explosive r’n’r played Stooges raw; you know there’s blood on the guitar, blood on the drums, blood on the stage.

Handclaps, tambourine, singalongs, a dirty, dirty guitar sound and a goulash of at least three decades of music – from 50s doo-wop to 60s garage to 70s glam rock and roll. Kick out the jams indeed.



People say we sound like….

The Stooges, Ty Segall, 70’s rock and psych

We are originally from…..

Fullerton CA

What music has had an influence on your sound?

All the different bands we play with. The Bad Machine, White Murder, Mechachief, The May Company, Ashing Velvets, and any Ghoulhouse Records bands. I pick up things from everyone, they are all so different from each other.

Tell us about your live show…

We rage.

What’s the most difficult part of being in a band?

I guess just all the work that isn’t related directly to playing music.

What do you make of the music industry right now?

Just like anything else, there are people who love music and then there are people who love money and popularity. They are vastly different but you can find them both in the industry. I try to hook up with the music people as much as possible.

Tell us about the scene in California.

It’s fucking great. Very diverse; total melting pot. Most nights you can go out and hear anything from electro pop to noise to psych to art rock. There are a million bands. Some people feel that is a bad thing but I like that it forces new shit to always be bubbling up.

How does the city’s musical history, or landscape influence your sound?

Well, yeah. It’s the home of Fender and also home to many punk rock pioneers like Middle Class and Adolescents. I think the influence is more of lifestyle than sound. We like to be self-sufficient and produce things ourselves. DIY.

What influences the band lyrically?

I tend to write sort of “stream of consciousness” style. My guess is that it is mostly influenced by music and movies I like.


Our most memorable gig ever was….

That’s a tough one. Although recently we played in Arcata at a house show and it was awesome. Everyone goes crazy at house shows. And it was in BigFoot territory.

If you could pick any time to travel back to for music, where would you go and what year would it be….

I would want to see Hawkwind live in the early 70s with Stacia dancing.

Growing up, at home we listened to…..

Too many things to list from a wide range of genres. Anything that was interesting was consumed.

What tunes are currently on heavy rotation for you…

DEAD MOON

If you could open for any band right now who would that be and why?

The Stooges. Iggy is amazing.

If you could only bring ONE record (you can all answer if you like) in the tour van what would it be?

A Dead Moon Best of record

When you’re not playing and have some time off, where could we find you…

Home

The one thing we want you to remember while you’re listening to our music….

Every part of every record is done by us except for the tangible pressing.

What’s up for 2015/2016?

Another full length. More shows. More touring.

- See more at: http://www.50thirdand3rd.com/garage-rock-slug-fest-meet-sean-gospel/#sthash.5N5HJhoc.dpuf - www.50thirdand3rd.com


"Band of the week: Sean Gospel"

More accurately, these are a few kind words about “Heart Felters and Face Melters,” which is the gospel according to Sean Gospel, in the form of a cassette released by Ghoulhouse Records. What we get from this cassette – more accurately, from the five songs on the cassette – is not only what we’ve been promised (these sounds do sound heartfelt, indeed, and our face has fallen to the melt), but complete rock and roll satisfaction.

We can honestly say we know very close to nothing about Sean Gospel, apart from being similarly wowed by some of his label-sharing sweethearts, and apart from being somehow magnetically attracted to the mania of “Heart Felters and Face Melters” and its frayed and fierce fourteen minutes, delivering a new and improved cure for rock and roll pneumonia. (Similarly, we can honestly we know very close to nothing about gospel, and yet, over the past five years, this is with all likelihood the album that we’ve listened to the most – not that these apes are keeping track).

But as a Low-man on the totem pole once asked, “What more do you want?” The satisfaction we get from “Heart Felters and Face Melters” – satisfaction born of despair, satisfaction of the high that comes from the low, satisfaction spewed from dastardly, distorted guitars and criminally abused drum sets, satisfaction made electric by howling about black clouds and black magic – is a satisfaction that can hardly be described, and likely needn’t be, certainly not at the expense of experiencing it for yourself.


A two-three-four and we’re gone. “Rattle Shake Bop” is the Gospel. “Wolfman Jack” is the Gospel. “Don’t Haunt Me” is the Gospel. “Rayonna” is the Gospel. “Tila Nook” is the Gospel. This is the gospel of Sean Gospel. What more do you want? - Revolt of the Apes


Discography

Sean Gospel - Heart Felters & Face Melters EP (Ghoulhouse Records)
Sean Gospel - Good Times with Bad Acid (Ghoulhouse Records)

Photos

Bio

As a founding member of The Gospels as well as independent label Ghoulhouse Records, Sean Gospel is on a rock and roll warpath. His preceding release, caught attention of Austin psych-fiend blog Revolt Of The Apes. Saying, "Magnetically attracted to the mania of “Heart Felters and Face Melters EP” and its frayed and fierce fourteen minutes, delivering a new and improved cure for rock and roll pneumonia."

His debut full length, Good Times With Bad Acid (Ghoulhouse Records) swings wide as a garage rock slug-fest. One moment we are in the arms of pure 70's rock grime with songs like "Witch" and "Black Car" and the next, stilled by his haunting falsetto on tracks like "Tila Nook." Written, recorded, mixed & mastered almost entirely himself, Good Times With Bad Acid shines with the strength of DIY bravado. For fans of The Stooges, Oblivians and Ty Segall, Sean Gospel provides a new soundtrack with all the occult rock fix-ins you could want.

Sean Gospel's Good Times With Bad Acid is OUT NOW on Ghoulhouse Records.

Band Members