Bands

Pennsylvania Psych-Punk Quartet Pale Fang Debuts Video for “Paradise”

Southeastern Pennsylvania’s Lehigh Valley, long the home of industrial titans such as Bethlehem Steel and Mack Trucks, was once a booming factory town. By the 1980s, famously recounted in a Billy Joel song, the industries that had bolstered a thriving economy had begun to suffer economic pitfalls. The local economy shifted away from manufacturing to service jobs; a recession plagued the twin cities of Allentown and Bethlehem. 

The Lehigh Valley eventually shifted its focus toward other industries – telecommunications, for instance, to diversify its economy. Unfortunately, the telecom boom in the early 2000s, promising to lift the economy, quickly burst. Things evened out; another recession blew through, then another…and as the economy ebbed and flowed, so did the experiences of those children of the 80s and 90s. As adults, they found themselves heirs to a post-industrial wasteland surrounding their promised little piece of paradise.

It all begs the question, what is – or was – the real paradise in the Lehigh Valley? Was it a “good” factory job at Bethlehem Steel, guaranteed to put food on the table and kids in a good school at the expense of the ecology? The religious utopia of Bethlehem founded by the Moravians seeking refuge from persecution in Germany? Or the pre-industrial arcadia treasured by the Lenape hunting for deer and grouse?

These questions are explored in Paradise, a new song from Allentown psych-punk quartet Pale Fang. Featuring Chad Huntington on guitar, D.D. Moon on vocals and guitar, Nick Pokrivchak on bass, and Lee Romich on drums, the band has been active since September 2022 and has been performing in the Surrounding Eastern PA area.

Pale Fang is influenced by post-punk, garage punk, and psych-rock and has drawn comparisons to Osees, Man or Astro-man? A Place To Bury Strangers, and Dead Moon. “Paradise” channels a dark punk sound, with its blistering lyrics challenging societal concepts of paradise and its representations. From spiritual, to financial, band lyricist D.D. Moon questions whether these riches are worthwhile or if it is merely a wild goose chase into the grave.

Accompanying the song is a super 8 music video shot by D.D. Moon and Dan Polachek, and edited by D.D. Moon. For the video the band wanted to take the idea of paradise literally and decided to showcase the post-industrial wasteland that surrounds their hometown. The gritty, DIY feel matches the post-apocalyptic scenario brought forth; we see sludgy waters, animal remnants, barbed wire fences, overpasses, and desolate landscapes of silos, junkyards, and abandoned homes. Black paradise, indeed…a stark reminder of consequence in the misguided name of “progress.”

Watch below:

Pale Fang is digitally releasing a 4 song ep titled “Paradise,” out on 4/20/23. The album was recorded, mixed, and mastered in Allentown, PA, by Josh Maskornick at Over/Under Recording Co. with album artwork by Antoine Bouthmy.

Follow Pale Fang: 

Alice Teeple

Alice Teeple is a photographer, multidisciplinary artist, and writer. She is not in Tin Machine.

Recent Posts

Los Angeles Industrial Darkwavers Spahn Ranch to Release Remaster Edition of “The Coiled One” on CD and Vinyl

The Coiled One, the sophomore release from Los Angeles-based Spahn Ranch, holds a revered spot…

4 hours ago

Listen to the Brooding Atmosphere of Portuguese Darkwavers Decline and Fall’s “Gloom” EP

Bleak Recordings is delighted to introduce Gloom, the inaugural EP from Portuguese dark wave band…

9 hours ago

Listen to Krakow-based Post-Punk Project Mekong’s New Album “Danse Danse” — Plus Interview

We succumb tonight It’s the funeral of hearts This misery will vanish tonight Mekong is…

10 hours ago

NYC Dream Pop Act Mahogany Debuts New Single “A Scaffold,” and its B-Side “Polyvalence”

Non-being of limitation Empty of being, empty abstractions Conditioned by transcendence Extra extrapolations Today, the…

10 hours ago

SoCal Post-Punk Outfit Head Cut are Pursued by Unseen Forces in the Video for Their Tempestuous New Single “Red Cloud”

what you don't know what you can't see red cloud is calling stalking watching hypnotizing…

11 hours ago

The Joy of Elephant Explores the Perils of Loving Someone who Exudes Chaos in “Walk Through Flowers”

The Joy of Elephant has trampled through our aural garden once again with the project's…

12 hours ago