Now split between Portland, Seattle, and Tacoma, Casual Hex return with new album Zig Zag Lady Illusion IIâthe politically charged sonic continuation of their first full-length. The new LP dropped June 13 via Seattleâs Youth Riot Records.
The band has been quiet since the release of their weirdo post-punk monolith Zig Zag Lady Illusion in 2018, andâdespite being one of Seattleâs best bands at the timeâwent dormant for years. That is until last month, when they surprise-released the psychedelic music video for âThe System,â announcing their new album Zig Zag Lady Illusion II.
From the very beginning of their relationship, core band members Erica Miller (guitar) and Jessie Odell (bass) had plans to create music together. âJessie and I have known each other since middle school. We had high school guitar class together and talked about moving to Portland to start a band,â explains Miller, of her and Odellâs time growing up in Maryland.
Miller did end up in Portland post-high school, with Odell heading to Seattle. Convinced of their need to start a band, Miller was driving up and down the I-5 corridor until relocating to the Emerald City. The foundation wasâquite literallyâimmediately laid for Casual Hex once Miller moved to Seattle in 2015.
âI was introduced to [our first drummer] Nick Anderson the day I moved to Seattle. The three of us hung out at Cafe Presse, then jammed until four in the morning,â remembers Miller. âThat was basically the inception of us playing music together, it was meant to be.â
Anderson moved to New York and no longer plays with Casual Hex, though he was quintessential in getting the band to where it is today. âHe played on the first album, and we did a European tour with him,â says Odell. âWe miss him.â âIt was really hard for us to find a new drummer that was as good a fit,â laments Miller. âMe, Jessie, and Nick were best friends, hanging out constantly.â
Finding the right person to join a band, especially when the group is already an album deep, is like finding a drumstick in a haystackâitâs not easy, but when it happens, you lock in immediately. After playing with several drummersâincluding Anthony Beauchemin of J.R.C.G., and Fiona Moonchild (who played with Scott Yoder)âKeegan Wiltshire joined the band in January of this year. He and Odell play in Seattle garage band the Nags; once the three were able to meet and jam together, it was a no-brainer asking Wiltshire to join Casual Hex permanently.
Between a rotating cast of drummers, Millerâs move back down to Portland, and the pandemic, a seven-year gap separating the bandâs two full-lengths is understandable, perhaps even necessary. Zig Zag Lady Illusion II continues the bandâs black-mirroring of societyâs existential collapse. The absurdism of expectations placed upon individuals ranking lower in the currently resolidifying caste system, when those at the top need not worry about laws or the lives of other humans, is not lost on Casual Hex.
Nowhere on the album is this more potently felt than on the opening track and first single, âThe System.â Millerâs deadpan continually asks both the listener and the powers that be, âCan you tell us why itâs all a disguise?â The human answer here is no, no one can say why world powers like the United States continually fund genocide around the globe when issues including houselessness and gun violence in this country are epidemics. The capitalistic answer to the question is money and powerâtrite desires that should pale in comparison to the need for building community and expanding social resources.
That same line can also be read as Miller asking, âCan you tell us why?â and then immediately answering her own question: âItâs all a disguise.â The lyricism here is unbelievably nuanced while remaining completely relatable to every person who isnât a billionaire.
âSamuel Joner IIâ shares a name with the âSamuel Jonerâ track on ZZLIâboth are mid-album noise-psych freakouts akin to the more experimental Sonic Youth offerings of the mid-â90s. It acts as a palate cleanser between the two sides of the record. Not that the A and B-sides are departures from one another, rather the âSamuel Jonerâ tracks offer a moment without vocals for the listener to absorb and process.
Album favorite âActive Wireâ heralds the beginning of Zig Zag Lady Illusion IIâs second half with the frightening statement: âWe found fear and our bodies were inside.â Are our bodies inside our own fears? Do we fear the Self to the point of alienation and isolation? These questions canât immediately be answered by the collective, but must first be reckoned with by the individualâonly then can we address and eventually live with our Selfs and the Selfs of others.
Noisy late-album meisterwerk âNo Aâ sums up the albumâs themes with deft precision as Miller repeats, âPower, control, and ammunition,â over the angular drones of guitar, bass, and percussion. Not conceptually dissimilar from Janet Jacksonâs meteoric 1986 single âControl,â both Jackson and Miller seek emancipation from established and would-be systems of oppressionâunderstanding and acknowledging what it means and will take to become completely autonomous.Â
Zig Zag Lady Illusion II is out now via Seattleâs Youth Riot Records.