SKORTS Showcase Jagged Indie Rock At The Basement

The band SKORTS performing in concert at The Basement in Nashville Tennessee

SKORTS sound like a band built in underground clubs while simultaneously trying to burst out of them. That tension sat at the center of the groupโ€™s opening set last week at The Basement in Nashville, where the New York band brought a volatile mix of post-punk tension, jagged indie rock, and physical live energy to an already packed room supporting Brigitte Calls Me Baby.

The cramped intimate stage ultimately worked in the bandโ€™s favor. Guitar cables tangled across the floor, bright stage lights bounced off black curtains and exposed brick. It’s the setting that lives in every garage band’s dream. Yet the music itself constantly pushed beyond the roomโ€™s limitations.

Much of that dynamic centered around vocalist and guitarist Alli Walls, who anchored the performance with a focused, almost hypnotic presence. Walls remained remarkably locked in vocally, delivering sharp melodies with an intensity that gave the songs structure underneath the group’s collective noise. The contrast became one of the setโ€™s most compelling qualities.

Juxtaposed to Wallsโ€™ calm, bassist Emma Welch fed off the groupโ€™s indie-rock frenzy. Alongside her, guitarist Char Smith threaded sharp, anxious guitar work, helping keep the songs on edge. The tension between the three gave the set its pulse, with Walls grounding the songs just as Welch and Smith threatened to blow them apart.

The band SKORTS performing in concert at The Basement in Nashville Tennessee

The bandโ€™s sound pulled from across the rock music spectrum. Yet it still managed to stay focused. Elements of post-punk, garage rock, art rock, and fuzzed-out indie collided throughout the set. But those collisions ended in a blended sound instead of simply rebounding off one another. The songs felt shaped through live performance, but still with enough jagged edges to feel alive–a quality that we hope the band holds on to as they grow.

Closing with โ€œDizzy,โ€ SKORTS leaned fully into that energy one final time. The song arrived loud, tense, and slightly unsteady in the best possible way, bringing the set to a close in a blur of tangled guitar work, restless movement, and just enough instability to keep everything feeling alive.


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