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Bobby Bare Jr. stirred up speculation on a recent podcast, but everything is fine in La La Land
Fans of Guided by Voices were taken aback on Monday when the news broke about the band’s supposed breakup. However, their team informed Rolling Stone that the band is still vibrant—so vibrant, in fact, that they have a new album set to release. Thick Rich and Delicious will be available on Halloween. No further details about the upcoming album were provided.
The rumors began circulating after Bobby Bare Jr. appeared on the latest episode of Lou Barlow and Adelle Barlow’s RAW Impressions podcast. During the episode, Adelle mentioned that she had never seen GBV perform, to which Bare quipped: “We’re breaking up. You never will [go to a show]. It’s over. We’re never playing again.” This understandably alarmed fans, though some believed he was just talking about live performances. As reported by Brooklyn Vegan, Adelle interpreted the conversation similarly. “From what I gather, they don’t plan to do any more live shows,” said Adelle. “But I believe they are still recording! Not broken up. And yes, I faced several technical issues during the podcast.” Lou added, “They are working on a new LP but, as I understand it, no more live performances.”
There’s a reason these rumors gained traction: Guided by Voices is familiar with breakups—they have split multiple times (initially breaking up in 2004, reuniting in 2010, breaking up again four years later, and reuniting once more in 2016)—and their lineup has changed frequently over the years. The current lineup—Robert Pollard, Bare, Kevin March, Doug Gillard, and Mark Shue—has been intact since 2016, and they have released nearly 20 albums together. Rolling Stone even praised 2021’s Earth Man Blues as the band’s best work since 1995’s Alien Lanes.
Guided By Voices released their most recent album, Universe Room, in February. The album includes tracks like “Fly Religion” and “I Will Be a Monk.”
“I aimed to create an experience, hopefully a wild ride, where listeners would want to revisit it multiple times to grasp all the different sections and audio layers, discovering something new with each listen,” frontman Pollard stated to Rolling Stone before the album’s release. “I cut down the songs to minimize repetition, ensuring that many sections appear only once or twice.”
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