Oruã, which plays Hooch and Hive in Tampa, Florida on Aug. 8, 2024. Credit: Photo via orua/Bandcamp
On its 2021 album Pastels, Salt Lake CIty indie-rock band Dad Bod established itself as reliable purveyors of poppy psych-rock. The family band—brothers Michael and Matthew and Marcus Marinos, plus compadres Russ Alphin and Michael Morgan—stays rooted there on a new album, Loop de Loop Miracle Ministries Lords of Glory, but gives itself a whole lot of room to sprawl out and sharpen the songwriting while also dipping into blues-rock (“Feels Like Forever”) and manic melancholia, too (“Alcohol”).

Brazilian rock band Oruã says it plays “A poor man’s jazz. Working-class’ krautrock,” but a new album released last month (Passe, stylized in all-caps), is so much more complicated than that.

A throwback of sorts to the glory days of ‘90s underground rock (members of Oruã did back Built To Spill on its 2022 LP), the 13-track outing goes loud and soft in unexpected places and deploys just-off-time rhythms to great effect, all alongside guitars in weird tunings and odd-but-irresistible melodies.

Palmetto psych-rock outfit Domino Pink rounds out this knockout of a show.

Tickets to see Dad Bod and Oruã play Hooch and Hive in Tampa on Thursday, Aug. 8 are still available and start at $10.


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Read his 2016 intro letter and disclosures from 2022 and 2021. Ray Roa started freelancing for Creative Loafing Tampa in January 2011 and was hired as music editor in August 2016. He became Editor-In-Chief...