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Sorority Noise Release New Single “No Halo” // ‘You’re Not As _____ As You Think’ Out March 17th via Triple Crown Records

January 23, 2017

Pat Nolan

Sorority Noise Stream “No Halo”

You’re Not As _____ As You Think Out March 17th
via Triple Crown Records

Sorority Noise have just released “No Halo”, the first single off of their new full length record You’re Not As _____ As You Think. You’re Not As _____ As You Think is the follow up to 2015’s critically acclaimed Joy, Departed. The new album us set to be released on March 17th via Triple Crown Records. Pre-orders are available now at sororitynoise.com. A quote from singer/guitarist Cam Boucher on the story behind the song can be found below.

“This song is about having a friend pass away and still keeping them fondly in your mind to the point where you show up to their house forgetting that they’re no longer there. It’s about struggling to keep up with the people you love when you’re away and how to be/how it feels to not be there for them when they need you most.” – Cam Boucher

Sorority Noise have also recently announced they will be touring this March with Modern Baseball, Kevin Devine and The Obsessives. Tickets for the tour are available now here. A full list of dates can be found below.

1. No Halo
2. A Portrait Of
3. First Letter From St. Sean
4. A Better Sun
5. Disappeared
6. Car
7. Where Are You?
8. Second Letter From St. Julien
9. Leave The Fan On
10. New Room

Tour Dates:
3/17 – Huntington, NY @ Paramount Theater^
3/18 – Brooklyn, NY @ Warsaw^
3/19 – Brooklyn, NY @ Warsaw^
3/21 – Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club^
3/22 – Wilmington, DE @ World Cafe Live^
3/24 – Norfolk, VA @ The Norva^
3/25 – Asheville, NC @ The Orange Peel*
3/26 – Charleston, SC @ Music Farm^
3/28 – Jacksonville, FL @ Mavericks^
3/29 – St. Petersburg, FL @ State Theater^
3/31 – Birmingham, AL @ Saturn^
4/01 – Nashville, TN @ Marathon Music Works^
4/02 – Houston, TX @ White Oak Music Hall^
4/04 – Austin, TX @ Emos^
4/05 – Dallas, TX @ Gas Monkey Live^
4/07 – Scottsdale, AZ @ Livewire^
4/08 – Pomona, CA @ The Glasshouse^
4/09 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Fonda^
4/10 – Berkley, CA @ Berkley Theater^
4/11 – Sacramento, CA @ Ace of Spades^
4/13 – Denver, CO @ Summit Theater^
4/14 – Omaha, NE @ Waiting Room^
4/15 – Des Moines, IA @ Wooly’s^
4/17 – Grand Rapids, MI @ 20 Monroe Live^
4/18 – Chicago, IL @ Concord Music Hall^
4/19 – Indianapolis, IN @ Egyptian Room^
4/20 – Columbus, OH @ Park Street^
4/21 – Buffalo, NY @ Town Ballroom^
4/22 – Sayreville, NJ @ Starland Ballroom^* = w/ Modern Baseball, The Obsessives
^ = w/ Modern Baseball, Kevin Devine and the Goddamn Band, The Obsessives

Sorority Noise write important songs. They go to uncomfortable places, unafraid to let the darkness in – but they’re also not shy at kicking back until the sorrow subsides. They’re songs of confusion, anger, life, death, mental health and, most importantly, hope. They’re what it means to be human.

That vulnerability has been Sorority Noise’s hallmark since they formed in 2013, but it’s never been as precise as it is on You’re Not As _____ As You Think, their third album, set for release March 17th via Triple Crown Records. The album follows the Connecticut-based quartet’s It Kindly Stopped For Me 7” (2016), critically acclaimed Joy, Departed (2015) and debut Forgettable (2014) and is the most collaborative, fully realized version of Sorority Noise to date.

Sorority Noise recorded You’re Not As _____ As You Think with producer Mike Sapone (Brand New, Taking Back Sunday) over the span of 10 days – three times longer than it took to track Joy, Departed – and this increased time allowed the band to hone the songwriting and visceral performances that have launched them onto tours with Modern Baseball, Citizen, Turnover and The Menzingers and into outlets like Pitchfork, Consequence of Sound, The Fader, Spin, AV Club and Stereogum.

Singer/guitarist Cameron Boucher, who prefers not to edit or overthink his lyrics, empties both his pen and soul on songs like “No Halo,” “Disappeared” and “A Portrait Of,” stark vignettes that find him coming to terms with the death of close friends. He’s had days, weeks and months to confront these and other emotions, and when it came time to write about them, the words spilled out.

So what you’re getting is an emotional bulldozer – an unfiltered, inward look at the last year of the band’s life that’s filled with intimate, visceral details yet remains universally relatable. But even amidst heavy subject matter, Sorority Noise want to give you a sense of resilience. “No matter what I feel, it’s going to be OK,” Boucher says. “Things are going to be tough, but it’s going to be fine in the end – and you have to keep going because you just have to. This is how it’s going to be. You’ve just got to do it.”

It’s in this way that the album’s title comes into view, and it only takes inserting a few adjectives – sad, happy, rich, poor – to realize life is all about perspective. Hardships are inevitable, but so is hope. Rather than living in the shadows, Sorority Noise have learned the only way to move past the struggle is by never stopping moving forward into the sun.

Sorority Noise
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