Kneecap, Pulp, Confidence Man and More of What You Heard at Underground on 12/05/25

Kneecap "H.O.O.D." (2025 Remix) cover
Frankly, I’m impressed by how many of you know all the words to “H.O.O.D.”

Thank you to everyone who made it out to Underground last night and for all the birthday wishes. I’ve always been pretty low maintenance about birthdays just because mine competes with Christmas parties (and competed with finals back when I was in school). So, I learned the best thing to do is book a DJ gig the weekend of my birthday and say, “I’m playing here, if you want to come by and say hi.” I’m always pleasantly surprised by who I see. Anyhow, outside of this playlist and one really short and shaky video for the ‘gram, I don’t have much documentation, so you’ll just have to trust me when I saw it was a vibe. 

As usual, the set list is below. Songs released in 2025 are in bold and link back to other references to the band on Beatique. And, before I sign off, tickets for New Year’s Eve at Club Underground are already available on Dice and Eventbrite. Two floors of indie, Britpop, darkwave, post-punk dancing all night. Get your tickets asap. 

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Bibliomancers: Curation Through Divination

High Crimes Cult Minds Bibliomancers 2025
High Crimes Cult Minds is the latest release from L.A. publisher Bibliomancers

Bibliomancers books aren’t your typical collections of retro ephemera. What began as a way for Astraleyes, aka James Weigel, co-founder of the physical media fest Analog Outlaw, to archive his voluminous collection of books. In the process, though, the L.A.-based publisher, whose recent titles include High Crimes, Cult Minds and New Age Grave, has become a conceptual, community art project where the collections of artists, mainly book covers and other ephemera, are bound in a tangible form, their pages revealing stories that go much deeper than aesthetics. 

“It’s not a straight, this is a book about 1970s paperbacks,” says Weigel of Bibliomancers on a recent video call. “There are publishers that do that perfectly and it’s great. They’re very inspiring to me, but my hope is that what we’re doing is interjecting a piece of our creative selves into it. If you look, there are elements there that go beyond just archiving a genre and I think that is really us as artists wanting to be more creatively involved in the process of making books.”

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Club Underground, Analog Outlaw and More Happening in L.A. 12/05 -12/10

Crowd shot from Depeche Mode x New Order Night at Club Underground at Grand Star Jazz Club in Los Angeles on April 18, 2025 (Photo: Liz Ohanesian)
See you at Club Underground on Friday, December 5 (Pic: Liz O.)

I’m back at Club Underground this Friday, December 5, and we’re going to be celebrating my birthday. Advance tickets are available now, but you can also get them at the door on Friday night at Grand Star Jazz Club inside Chinatown’s Central Plaza, right next to the Bruce Lee statue. Party starts at 9:30 p.m. and is 21+. 

So, what’s in store for Friday? IDK, but it’s my birthday (sort of, my actual date of birth is on a weeknight this year), so I’ll probably make you dance to Fontaines D.C. And Sextile and Confidence Man and The New Eves. We’ll see what happens. 

Anyhow, that’s not all that’s happening this weekend in Los Angeles, so keep reading for some of my recommendations. 

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Best of 2025: The Year in Political Songs

Utility box in Los Angeles with graffiti that reads "Free Palestine" on top and "Fuck ICE" in the center (Photo: Liz Ohanesian)
The vibe in downtown Los Angeles for 2025. (Pic: Liz O.)

For the first of Beatique’s Best of 2025 lists, I wanted to highlight political songs for a very specific reason. Politics aren’t brand safe. You’ll risk alienating the people who disagree with you. You might scare off the companies who would otherwise want to work with you. Blah blah blah. But, at a certain point, if you’re someone with a platform, be it music, art, film or writing, you will need to ask yourself, “Am I a brand? Or am I a human being who actually gives a shit about what’s happening in the world?” Hopefully, the latter is the answer. 

Particularly in this moment, we need artists who are willing to be outspoken. For every semi-anonymous person (or bot) chiding you to “stick to the music,” there will be many more motivated to say, I’m against this too. Some might go to a protest, or write their local representatives or get involved with activist group. Maybe music can’t change minds, but it can prompt the quieter people to raise their voice. And, maybe, years from now, kids listening to the 2025 throwbacks will hear that there were people against genocide and fascism and exploiting workers and everything else that’s coming to a head right now. That said, much respect to the eleven artists on this list. They are by no means the only people making political music in 2025, but they made the songs that have been in my personal rotation. In keeping with an egalitarian theme, this list is not ranked. 

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Habibi Funk Gets Into the ‘Bourj Hammoud Groove’ with Ara Kekedjian Collection

Cover of Habibi Funk 033 Bourj Hammoud Groove by Ara Kekedjian title is written on cover in Armenian alphabet

From its first note, “Mini, Midi, Maxi,” the opening track off Bourj Hammoud Groove, Habibi Funk’s new Ara Kekedjian retrospective, will transport you to another time and place. You don’t know where in the world you are, but it’s somewhere around the end of the 1960s and you’re feeling very jet set as you shimmy against psychedelic lights in your Paco Rabanne fit while smoking a really long cigarette. The band is giving Jacques Dutronc energy with a song that falls somewhere in between “Mini, Mini, Mini” and “Et Moi, Et Moi, Et Moi.” You don’t really understand the lyrics, but it doesn’t matter. Vibe transcends language at the global disco-a-go-go. 

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Chin Up Buttercup, Austra Dropped a New Album and It’s Dance Floor Magic

Austra Chin Up Buttercup album cover

If there is one song on Chin Up Buttercup that summarizes this fifth full-length album from Austra, it’s “The Hopefulness of Dawn.” The six-minute epic opens with a cavernous, echoing intro that plays up the ethereal quality of Katie Stelmanis’ voice. Then, at about two-and-a-half minutes into the song, the raver synths kick in, rising with her voice as a new rhythm overtakes the song. Stelmanis’ name-checks Ray of Light as an influence and, indeed, “The Hopefulness of Dawn” does play out like Austra’s twist on the title track from Madonna’s era-defining 1998 album in that it’s an ecstatic, almost spiritual, slice of dance music. 

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Karen Schoemer Wrote a Poem a Day in August, 2022. The Resulting Album Is Out Now.

Karen Schoemer press photo by Michael Rogers
Photo by Michael Rogers

August, the latest album from Karen Schoemer, began with the prompt to write a poem a day for a month. Sounds like a straightforward premise, right? In reality, it was a multi-year process of writing and cutting and pasting before recording the poems, which are backed by music that pals like Mike Watt, Oli Heffernan, Amy Rigby, Wednesday Knudsen and others composed. 

“I had the idea to make an album in August of 2022,” Schoemer recalls on a recent video call. That’s when she emailed her collaborators with the idea as well. “Oli Heffernan sent music within an hour. He was like, here are seven pieces of music that I’m not doing anything with.” A few others composed pieces with only the knowledge that the piece needed to be about two minutes long and it was for a project called August.

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Brian Jonestown Massacre, PRS Fundraiser and More Happening in Los Angeles 11/20-11/26

Flyer for Philosophical Research Society Courtyard Sale on November 22, 2025

It’s a big week for Brian Jonestown Massacre fans in L.A. The psychedelic band is playing two nights at Teragram Ballroom and, while the show on Saturday, November 22, is totally sold out, there are still tickets available to see them on Sunday, November 23

In addition, there are two related film screenings happening within the next week. On Saturday, November 22, Dig! XX, the 20th anniversary of the cult classic Brian Jonestown Massacre/Dandy Warhols documentary screens at Brain Dead Studios with Joel Gion of the band on hand for a Q/A session with moderator Yasi Salek of Bandsplain Podcast. Over at Philosophical Research Society on Tuesday, November 25, you can catch the world premiere of God Is My Girlfriend, a BJM jam session filmed in 2010 that has not been screened in a theater until now. Members of the band will be at the premiere as well. 

Keep reading for more happening around town between today, November 20, and next Wednesday, November 26. 

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‘The Ferryman and His Wife’ Travel Through the Space Between Life and Death in New Novel

Cover of The Ferryman and His Wife by Frode Grytten

November 18 is the last day of Nils Vik’s life. And, for his final act, the elderly ferryman boards his boat and navigates the fjord, as he has done on so many other days. This time, though, he is joined by his dearly departed, yet still trusty, dog. As he travels the waters that he knows so well, Vik encounters a legion of passengers who, like his dog, have already died. As memories and revelations of his life rise to the surface, Vik awaits the one person with whom he wants to reunite, his late wife. 

The latest novel from Norwegian author Frode Grytten, The Ferryman and His Wife is also his first to be translated into English. In Norway, Den Dagen Nils Vik døde (English: The Day That Nils Vik Died, according to Wikipedia) was released two years ago and went on to win the country’s prestigious Brage Prize. The U.S. edition, translated by Alison McCullough, came out just last week and it’s a must-read. 

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Indie music and alt culture blog from Los Angeles. By Liz O.