
Labrador
Labrador *'My Version Of Desire' Release Show* w/ Hurry + Lowercase Roses + Petal
Khyber Pass Pub
56 S 2nd St
Philadelphia, PA 19106

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Labrador Biography
9 songs, 30 minutes.
The sort of lean, sharp pop music that you get from a steady diet of Motown, The Who, Creedence Clearwater Revival. The short-story wit of Paul Weller, Smokey Robinson, Nick Lowe. Labrador’s My Version Of Desire is that rarest of modern marvels: an impeccably crafted sonic story collection as replete with hooks as it is heartfelt insights into our todays and yesterdays. Guitars chime and fizz in the power pop tradition; choruses burst in technicolor, memorized before they’re even over. You sit down with My Version Of Desire — or you drive with it, let it guide you to the bus stop or the corner store — and hear the tangles of life pulled at like snarled-up guitar cables. It’s an album that’s lived-in and lived-with.
Led by guitarist, singer, and songwriter Pat King, Labrador has been around for a handful of years — seen moves to a new city (Philadelphia), seen a handful of lineup changes (the band is now officially King, Will Hochgertel and Steve Kurtz), and an excellent full-length breakthrough in 2023’s Hold The Door For Strangers. As you might guess from the title, Strangers was an album about empathy, full of poignant character studies and patient witching-hour ruminations.
Consider My Version Of Desire the big, beating heart to that earlier album’s busy, roving thoughts. The songs this time around turn inward, lessons in love and acceptance and mercy, via the lens of how we might learn to love and accept and forgive ourselves. The beauty here is that these self-portraits are delivered with so much dynamism, so much electricity. Confessionals set to mid-60s confections. “Dry Out In June” is a song about sobriety delivered with the excitable pop charge of Small Faces or My Aim Is True-era Elvis Costello, roaring like a mid-80s Replacements single beneath a corona of soda-pop electric organ. “Someday I’ll Pay” stomps and blooms in the key of Ted Leo & The Pharmacists, guilt and trauma wrestled with in a major key. “Heavy Hearts” has both Nashville and Memphis in its wall of twanging Les Pauls, Stax hooks, and widescreen harmonies (“I’ve got a heeeaaavy heart”).
More often than not these songs start loud and get louder (credit engineer/mixer Heather Jones and mastering engineer Chris Walla for their brilliant work in helping make these pocket symphonies burst). King and company get down to the tough stuff of figuring yourself out, but the warmth here, the melodies and energy and ebullient blend of alt-country and mod-soul, always frame that soul-searching as a thing of beauty. My Version Of Desire — a true masterpiece -- is an album about love in all of the complexity that the word, in its truest depth, underlines. It’s a real kindness offered to all of us that Pat King and Labrador trace the rocky garden paths we have to take with such a joy for living, and with such a keen sense for the beauty of the flowers.
- Chad Jewett, Perennial
Winter 2025
Read MoreThe sort of lean, sharp pop music that you get from a steady diet of Motown, The Who, Creedence Clearwater Revival. The short-story wit of Paul Weller, Smokey Robinson, Nick Lowe. Labrador’s My Version Of Desire is that rarest of modern marvels: an impeccably crafted sonic story collection as replete with hooks as it is heartfelt insights into our todays and yesterdays. Guitars chime and fizz in the power pop tradition; choruses burst in technicolor, memorized before they’re even over. You sit down with My Version Of Desire — or you drive with it, let it guide you to the bus stop or the corner store — and hear the tangles of life pulled at like snarled-up guitar cables. It’s an album that’s lived-in and lived-with.
Led by guitarist, singer, and songwriter Pat King, Labrador has been around for a handful of years — seen moves to a new city (Philadelphia), seen a handful of lineup changes (the band is now officially King, Will Hochgertel and Steve Kurtz), and an excellent full-length breakthrough in 2023’s Hold The Door For Strangers. As you might guess from the title, Strangers was an album about empathy, full of poignant character studies and patient witching-hour ruminations.
Consider My Version Of Desire the big, beating heart to that earlier album’s busy, roving thoughts. The songs this time around turn inward, lessons in love and acceptance and mercy, via the lens of how we might learn to love and accept and forgive ourselves. The beauty here is that these self-portraits are delivered with so much dynamism, so much electricity. Confessionals set to mid-60s confections. “Dry Out In June” is a song about sobriety delivered with the excitable pop charge of Small Faces or My Aim Is True-era Elvis Costello, roaring like a mid-80s Replacements single beneath a corona of soda-pop electric organ. “Someday I’ll Pay” stomps and blooms in the key of Ted Leo & The Pharmacists, guilt and trauma wrestled with in a major key. “Heavy Hearts” has both Nashville and Memphis in its wall of twanging Les Pauls, Stax hooks, and widescreen harmonies (“I’ve got a heeeaaavy heart”).
More often than not these songs start loud and get louder (credit engineer/mixer Heather Jones and mastering engineer Chris Walla for their brilliant work in helping make these pocket symphonies burst). King and company get down to the tough stuff of figuring yourself out, but the warmth here, the melodies and energy and ebullient blend of alt-country and mod-soul, always frame that soul-searching as a thing of beauty. My Version Of Desire — a true masterpiece -- is an album about love in all of the complexity that the word, in its truest depth, underlines. It’s a real kindness offered to all of us that Pat King and Labrador trace the rocky garden paths we have to take with such a joy for living, and with such a keen sense for the beauty of the flowers.
- Chad Jewett, Perennial
Winter 2025
Garage Rock
Rock
Soul
Alt-country
Alternative
Mod
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