Heaven’s Club
PRESS:
● Heaven’s Club Take Listeners on a Wild, Cosmic Ride With ‘Today’ - KQED
● The New What’s Next: Heaven’s Club - New Noise Magazine
CONTACTS:
● Total Accord Booking: Jackie Gabovich
Heaven’s Club is the collaboration between Shiv Mehra (Deafheaven) and Chris Natividad (Marbled Eye), blending introspective lyrics with expansive, ethereal sonics. Their sound balances emotional urgency with distant atmosphere. Their latest release, Free World, is a blistering 3-song cassette that paints a surreal portrait of our fractured world. It explores the contradictions of modern freedom, where autonomy often comes at others’ expense, and the pursuit of wealth leads to devastation. Through disillusionment and sonic experimentation, Free World captures the tension between liberty and systemic inequality, set against an existential backdrop.
The opening track, “Destroyer,” merges post-punk urgency with krautrock rhythms and psychedelia. Hypnotic motorik beats and swirling guitars create a driving, disorienting atmosphere of tension and release, with angular bass lines and rhythmic precision.
The title track, “Free World,” blends shoegaze dreaminess with Beatles style melodies. Shimmering guitars and melancholic vocals convey the illusion of freedom against harsh inequality, embodied in the refrain: “Free world is not so free to me, peace is not enough.” It expresses a longing for systemic change and equal rights.
The second track, “d(us)t,” is an instrumental whirl of synths and soundscapes, driven by a Spacemen 3-style bass line and Dan Tracy’s propulsive drumming. Its krautrock-inspired soundscape creates a cavernous, contemplative atmosphere reflecting themes of disillusionment and longing.
Following the introspective All That Was EP (2021) and their 2019 album Here, There and Nowhere, Free World marks a bold evolution for the band, both sonically and thematically. Their move to Born Losers Records signals a new chapter–offering a raw critique of modern societal structures and a call for equal rights and systemic change. Heaven’s Club continues to defy genre boundaries, merging nostalgia, protest, and urgency into an unforgettable sonic experience.