Mall Tales

Swimwear Department makes a splash with raucous concerts and quirky tunes about retro teen spirit. Live Photo by Todd Spoth,

Swimwear Department live
Swimwear Department live

Step into the crowd of a Swimwear Department concert, and you’re transported into a 1950s fever dream. Dressed in a bright, flowery romper at a June show at Darwin’s Pub, lead singer Matt Graham swerves through the audience, imploring show-goers to participate. His energy is manic and exuberant as he leads calls-and-response about swimming pools, and initiates a spirited limbo contest. The crowd chants “summer” as the contest winner cuts a ribbon with oversized scissors to mark the start of the season.


Drawing inspiration from Graham’s experience as a creative-writing teacher — his day job — Swimwear Department started two summers ago as a writing prompt of sorts. Graham and bassist Ned Gayle, a local improv comedian, built the band’s aesthetic around a name they cooked up while trading messages on Facebook Messenger. “It’ll be like Beach Boys meets Office Space,” Gayle sent Graham, which led to a musical style that blends surf-rock and ’50s pop with a splash of Motown sensibility. From there, they layered on the instruments — drums and a fuzzed-out base to start, keys to follow — and found their lyrical center: the mall. 

Graham, 38, is old enough to remember the mall’s cultural weight in the ’80s and ’90s. In his songs, he treats the mall as a living being, one that provides joy and levity but that also must shapeshift with the times. “It’s whimsical and it’s fun and it’s a party, but I’m still able to channel some sincere grief about the malls closing,” he says. A folk singer in a previous life, Graham grew up in a strict Christian household and grappled with spirituality and the loss of his father in his 20s. Swimwear Department helps him work through issues of identity with optimism and a sense of humor. (Graham’s lighthearted advice to the mall — that it could have a second life as a mega-church in the band’s new song “Clothing Optional” — also serves as a reminder to himself that he has permission to evolve.) 

Swimwear Department liveSwimwear Department live

This fall, the foursome, rounded out by drummer Jack Gordon and keyboardist Jeremy Grisbee, will release three new songs as a follow-up to their 2018 EP Turn Over! Go Under!: “Clothing Optional,” “At The Pool,” and “Mallster,” about inventors who live to regret their inventions — including, yes, the mall. 

To promote their new music, the band embarks on a series of colorful gigs this month, which they’ll probably play wearing some sort of costume, such as matching swimsuits. Houston label Splice Records’ River Revival Festival in New Braunfels (Sept. 26-29) will provide a river-floating backdrop to the band’s summery tunes, and a splashy tailgate party hosted by the Houston Dynamo team sounds off on Oct. 6. They’ll inevitably play while dressed in concert-specific costuming (they’ve been known to don matching swimsuits).

Says Graham, “We’re just riding the wave.

AT TOP: Swimwear Department’s Jack Gordon, Jeremy Grisbee, Matt Graham and Ned Gayle

Art+Culture

Surf lessons are taught by handsome Australian instructors

THE PERSONAL SERVICE starts as soon as guests clear customs at the Maldives’ Malé Velana international airport. Visitors are whisked away in a speedboat to the Gili Lankanfushi resort, reminiscent of the opening scene of a new White Lotus season. While sipping a ginger juice, guests’ shoes are taken off and feet are cleaned. Then they’re handed back their belongings, in a bag labeled “No news, no shoes” — Gili’s mantra.

Keep Reading Show less
People + Places

Listed by Kim Perdomo with the Perdomo Group, 290 Knipp was under contract after just five days.

IS A HEALTHY, balanced real estate market finally here? Per HAR data, the answer is ... kind of? Inventory is at the highest level since 2011, prices are holding steady, and the city and metro area continue to grow in population. Having lost population after Harvey and Covid, the city welcomes significant yet sustainable growth — and a housing market that can handle it.

Keep Reading Show less
Home + Real Estate