“There’s a fearlessness in the group’s tilted harmonies and in the strange turns of its storytelling.” — NPR Music
“It’s hard not to feel the energy rippling between the three of them as [Folk Bitch Trio] sing—it emanates off the stage into the crowd. It’s the kind of performance where you know you’re watching people fully wrapped up in and committed to their craft.” — Paste
Folk Bitch Trio—the Australian band of Gracie Sinclair (she/her), Jeanie Pilkington (she/her) and Heide Peverelle (they/them)— have just released their debut album, Now Would Be A Good Time, in which they “effortlessly meld their individual perspectives into a stunningly cohesive style” (FLOOD). The album has rapidly garnered glowing praise from the likes of the Boston Globe, Paste, Uncut, Brooklyn Vegan, NME and more, with the latter hailing the album as “a masterful debut that lingers long after the final notes ring out.”
After selling out headline shows in New York City and Los Angeles, Folk Bitch Trio have announced their first North American headline tour this November . They’ll bring their “otherworldly” (The Line of Best Fit) live show to 11 cities across the US and Canada.
Now Would Be A Good Time tells vivid, visceral stories. Folk Bitch Trio’s music sounds familiar, built on a foundation of the music they’ve loved throughout their lives–gnarled Americana, classic rock, piquant, and clear-eyed balladry. Yet the songs are modern and youthful, with the trio singing acutely through dissociative daydreams, galling breakups, sexual fantasies and media overload— all the petty resentments and minor humiliations of being in your early twenties in the 2020s.