Join us Thursday, June 25th for an evening of original music with 4 incredible bands ft. Rose House, Greaseface, Sisyphean feat & Jack Alboher!
Genre-bending indie-pop group Cady Ternity was conceived with its debut album, The New Direction, in a 200-year-old cabin nestled in the foothills of Northfield, Vermont by Ben Burr and Sara Primo in January of 2023. With the help of drummer Griffin Crafts the spousal songwriting duo have earned critical acclaim for their sophomoric album, On & On Anon, which— according to Jordan Adams at Seven Days— was “…one of the best Vermont records of 2024.”
“…colorful, mysterious, a little bit funny and occasionally dark,” Adams says, “…an essential new Vermont voice.”
“3 dumb idiots banging heads 2 make soundz”
https://idiotsavantvt.bandcamp.com/album/devour-you
https://www.instagram.com/idiotsavantvt/
https://remirussin.bandcamp.com/track/lotusfoot
https://www.instagram.com/remi_russin_vevo/
A Rose House song is a quiet moment alone in a Spanish chapel, or getting sunburnt while shooting guns in the desert. It’s looking out the smudged window of a subway car for a glance at the black waters of the East River, or finding divinity in the shoes of a loved one left at the top of the stairs.
Scout Watkins, the songwriter, guitarist, and singer at the helm of Rose House, leads with curiosity, and has a keen sense for what is beautiful. Her lyrics invoke the divine and praise the human, exploring the gnarled and undeniable truths that live at the hearts of both tenderness and brutality. From ambient meditations to slick guitar riffs to head-thrashing drums, these songs evolve from peace to madness to peace again.
With synthesist Noah Valenti, drummer Billy Svolos, and bassist Grace Schmidhauser, Rose House music is prophecy packaged as post-rock that easily gets stuck inside your head. At shows, Watkins captivates with her frenetic performance, and the trusting attention between bandmates invites the watcher to rage, have their heart broken, and then go for a cool swim in a summer river.













