Delcobras ~ Team Goldie ~ Quiet Time

Ages 21 and up
Delcobras ~ Team Goldie ~ Quiet Time
Friday, February 27
Doors: 7 pm Show: 7:30 pm
$18.26

AGE RESTRICTION: Only Ages 21+ can purchase tickets for this show. NO REFUNDS/EXCHANGES for anyone underage who purchases or attempts to use these tickets.

Doors: 7:00 PM

Show: 7:30 PM

 

DelCobras
 
DelCobras are a Three Headed Pop Monster from Delaware County (Delco), Pennsylvania, featuring Jim Lorino (vocals, guitar, synths), Marc Schuster (bass, vocals), and Nick Cervini (drums). Known for fun, catchy, hook-filled power pop with pop-punk and garage rock influences, reminiscent of Weezer or Fountains of Wayne, they deliver upbeat, energetic songs with lyrics often touching on relatable local experiences. They gained traction with singles like “The Turnaround” and the EP New Skins, including airplay on WXPN and Sirius XM.
 
Team Goldie
 
Team Goldie is the solo project of Philadelphia-based musician Matt DiStefano who combines elements of pop-punk, hip-hop and hair metal into his own genre-bending style of pop music. As a live band they are five dudes with attitude delivering arena energy on a VFW budget. RIYL: Html code on a MySpace page, a mislabeled Blink 182 song downloaded from Napster, your mom picking you up from Warped Tour.
 
 
Quiet Time
 
Quiet Time is the rare Philadelphia emo band born from a pandemic, a basement, and the universal feeling that someone out there is definitely having more fun than you. Formed when vocalist MaiAda Carpano and guitarist Nick Tuttle turned their COVID-induced row-home cabin fever into a mission, the band grew as they recruited friends who shared the same DIY spirit, gear of varying reliability, and enough angst to power several zip codes. MaiAda’s myth-meets-modern-meltdown lyricism has resulted in songs about dating apps, growing up, and the tragic venues that no longer exist. Rounded out by Philly scene stalwart Tom Farnham, Philly Naked Bike Ride organizer Oren Eisenberg, and bike punk legend Randy LoBasso, Quiet Time has spent the last two years proving once and for all that sometimes the saddest bands make the most fun noise.
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