Daggers & Waves are trapped. Bound together in a slippery genre car crash with gut wrenching ferocity that tugs and gnaws at the heart and bones.
Electro, proto-punk, jazz, spoken word, shoegaze, alt rock ‘n’ roll and soul sit at the centre of their trans-sonic universe. Blown up, spat out and mushed down through the voice and fingers of band leader and quantum-philanthropist Jassen Summogum. Daggers & Waves live for making their music, inter-dimensional extreme poetry and chocolate digestive biscuits.
Live shows are arresting, raw and potent. Hopeful, powerful and tragic, forever teetering at the fringes of dilemma and damnation.
“One of the best indie rock records of 2014.” - Deadly Music
“Heavy beats and lyrics containing anger, humour and the sort of clever and rude imagery that Ian Dury did so well” – Bristol Evening Post
“Eclectic, raucous and brimming with a bounding energy, their sound moulds Rock ‘N Roll, Jazz and the entire history of Indie into a raw musical spectrum of brilliance.” – Chris Fear, http://counterpointcollective.org/
“Absolutely terrifying” – The Daily Mail
Daggers & Waves are trapped. Bound together in a slippery genre car crash with gut wrenching ferocity that tugs and gnaws at the heart and bones.
Electro, proto-punk, jazz, spoken word, shoegaze, alt rock ‘n’ roll and soul sit at the centre of their trans-sonic universe. Blown up, spat out and mushed down through the voice and fingers of band leader and quantum-philanthropist Jassen Summogum. Daggers & Waves live for making their music, inter-dimensional extreme poetry and chocolate digestive biscuits.
Live shows are arresting, raw and potent. Hopeful, powerful and tragic, forever teetering at the fringes of dilemma and damnation.
“One of the best indie rock records of 2014.” - Deadly Music
“Heavy beats and lyrics containing anger, humour and the sort of clever and rude imagery that Ian Dury did so well” – Bristol Evening Post
“Eclectic, raucous and brimming with a bounding energy, their sound moulds Rock ‘N Roll, Jazz and the entire history of Indie into a raw musical spectrum of brilliance.” – Chris Fear, http://counterpointcollective.org/
“Absolutely terrifying” – The Daily Mail