credit: Daniel Everett and Angie Bandari
Voxtrot
Voxtrot was embraced far and wide in the early aughts blog era, initially with a pair of EPs, self-released on the band’s Cult Hero label.
As expeditiously as the band was built up, they were pulled apart, calling it quits in 2010 shortly after their Playlouder/Beggars debut LP.
While moving on with their individual lives, Voxtrot’s legacy grew. A new legion of fans discovered their music posthumously, many too young to have known about them while they were originally active.
“I had a dream where we were onstage and it was really positive,” remembers frontman Ramesh Srivastava in 2022. “There was such a strong and palpable feeling of love in my heart that when I woke up, it was still with me. I switched on my phone and started looking at things tagged with “Voxtrot” on social media – teenagers covering our songs, people with Voxtrot tattoos – and went down this internet rabbit hole that made me realize how much love there still is for the band. For the first time since we broke up, it seemed very, very obvious that we should do this.”
With that, Voxtrot reunited.
The band has released 4 singles since, and are putting the finishing touches on their next full-length LP.
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