Captured Tracks tape play apple bandcamp facebook instagram soundcloud spotify twitter youtube mail

Artist Bio

The budding grunge four piece Momma has always relied on songwriters Etta Friedman and Allegra Weingarten’s symbiotic writing style and creative intuition. “I remember the title, Two of Me, originally came from this creative day Etta and I were having together,” Weingarten recalls. “Etta said something like, ‘It’s crazy—being alone with you is like being alone with myself.’ It references that feeling and encapsulates how we write together: a form of communication, where we’ll constantly switch off who is playing lead and who is playing rhythm guitar in the same song.” Self-taught guitarists who grew up outside of Los Angeles, Friedman and Weingarten met by fate in high school and eventually began writing songs together. The pair’s close friendship provided an open channel to create and experiment from a place of trust and joint experience. Inspired by songwriters like Kim Deal, Liz Phair, and Elliott Smith, the two developed a knack for dynamic song structure and gripping lyrics fused by a dulcet pop sensibility. Much like the two fish that depict Friedman and Weingarten’s birth sign, Pisces, the duo are locked in an infinite loop, constantly feeding off of one another’s musical ideas. Although the pair now live far from home and each other while finishing college in New York and New Orleans, Friedman and Weingarten have continued to write the same way they always have. For the past two years, during breaks between semesters, the two would assemble DIY west coast tours, open LA dates for bands like Gang of Four and Ian Sweet, and workshop new songs together at home. Decorated with bright interlocking guitars, confident harmonies, and vivid storytelling, the band’s debut album Interloper and recent Apollo 7” capture Friedman and Weingarten hitting a stride at the end of their adolescence, while establishing a sound and vision that the band continues to expand upon. Friedman and Weingarten began building a more focused and detailed world in the material they started to write for their second full length. Over the course of several writing sessions—often months apart—the two wrote one song after another, slowly piecing together the story of an alternate reality they called “The Bug House.”Two of Me is an ambitious concept album made up of fictional vignettes dealing with morality, youth, and punishment, that Friedman and Weingarten have populated with tragic heroes from their imagination. “The Bug House represents this sort of underground purgatory or hell that people are sent to as punishment,” Weingarten explains. “Two of Me’s songs are about coming to terms with the side of you within yourself that is maybe capable of darker things.” Momma’s second full length unfolds like a small town drama, where characters like video stringers and young lovers experience poetic justice in carnivalesque settings, detailed through Friedman and Weingarten’s illustrative lyrics. “It’s cool to have this world to go to that just belongs to Allegra and I, that we canboth work on and revisit while we’re living in separate places,” Friedman notes. “Having a larger concept that’s not rooted in reality made it a lot easier to work on together from a far. The album is rooted in a lot of real feelings and experiences, but we wanted the stories to be set in a fictional world.” Two of Me was recorded in Los Angeles with producer/engineer Aron Kobayashi Ritch, who bolstered Friedman and Weingarten’s desire to experiment with deeper and more distorted sounds, along with drummer Zach CapittiFenton and bass player Sebastian Jones, who made up the rhythm section for most of the album’s tracks. Two Of Me’s opener “Bug House” sets the stage for the record, with its expressive guitar tones and brooding mood. The album’s more abrasive moments like “Derby,” which alludes to the anxiety of a Jockey in a fixed horse race, are balanced by melodic ballads like “Double Dare,” which follows a romantic pair pining for a world away from their violent hometown. “Biohazard” features some of the album’s most grotesque diction (“Crushing cartilage. Binding on a binge. Fucker is a freak, baiting this Select an area to comment on

barbarian”) sang in unison to tell the story of a troubled individual struggling with Dissociative Identity Disorder, and the evil/remorse that co-exist within him. Friedman and Weingarten each step into a lonely spotlight on their respective solo performances “Ready Runner” and “Not a Runner,” which feature tender instrumentation and introspective lyrics. Two of Me’s climactic closer “Habitat” doesn’t offer resolution for the album’s protagonists, but instead uses the moment to take in the complex beauty of life and the landscape, before releasing a final deafening exhale.Despite Friedman and Weingarten’s many similarities, their creative compatibility on Two of Me is fueled by their appreciation for each other’s differences. The songwriters’ personal tastes and intuitions are valued and explored by one another equally, allowing the pair to make a record that feels both familiar and intriguing. Like a yin & yang symbol, Friedman and Weingarten understand that nothing is made up solely of light or darkness, and confronting each part of yourself is the first step to seeing the whole picture

Contact

MANAGEMENT

Chad Heimann at Brilliant Corners Artist Management: chad@brilliantcorners.com

BOOKING (NORTH AMERICA, SOUTH AMERICA, AUSTRALIA, ASIA)

Marshall Betts & Lindsey Schiffman at TBA Agency: mbetts@tbaagency.com, lschiffman@tbaagency.com

BOOKING (EUROPE)

Will Marshall at Primary Talent International: will@primarytalent.com

NEWS

Rolling Stone: Momma’s Alt-Rock Carnival Ride
2020-08-26

California bandmates explain how their love of Veruca Salt and spooky sideshows led to their great new album, ‘Two of Me’

The Alternative reviews Momma's 'Two of Me'
2020-07-22

Momma has more punch and more darkness than their peers. Two of Me is a concept album: a creative move that can be tricky to pull off. It holds to the structure required of it, loosely, but enough to hold it together, even if you don’t pick up on the storyline on your own. Momma set themselves apart, proving they are adept at creating compelling character studies rather than just exercising their demons.

Post Trash reviews Momma's 'Two of Me'
2020-07-06

The songs are uniformly catchy, burrowing their way into the listener’s subconscious. Befitting the otherworldly narrative, there’s a dreamy, ethereal quality to all of the instrumentals that contrasts with the specificity of the lyrics. Melodies shine through an omnipresent layer of guitar fuzz, almost like the sun piercing through a layer of clouds. While I hope to never inhabit the Bug House with all of the characters in these songs, I expect to pay return visits often.

ZO Magazine: 'Momma: Purgatorial Double Dares'
2020-07-06

In early June Los Angeles’ Momma dropped their latest, ‘Two of Me.’ An exploration of morality, youth and more we talked about the thematics, how they have utilized what they can while apart, and the future of the band – even with the uncertainty of the world lingering.

Alt Citizen: Duality and partnership with Momma
2020-06-22

Before the record’s release, we had the chance to speak with Friedman and Allegra over e-mail about how their quarantine is going, how Two of Me came to be, and the concept behind the record.

LA Weekly Interview: 'MOMMA DIGS INTO MORALITY AND PUNISHMENT'
2020-06-15

Los Angeles’ grunge-inspired alt-rock four piece Momma, led by co-singers and songwriters Etta Friedman and Allegra Weingarten, have a new album, Two of Me, out now. We spoke to them about that, current events and more…

Paste Magazine reviews Momma's 'Two of Me'
2020-06-08

Trusting a listener always requires a leap of faith, and Momma is happy to throw caution to the wind. Their ability to maintain a clear sense of direction while embracing ambiguity makes this album an utterly rewarding listen.

Talkhouse: Momma Talks Life in the Bug House
2020-06-02

The LA grunge-pop group takes us on a tour of the fictional world of their new album Two Of Me.



Mode: