Beloved Indie-Rock Outfit The Wheel Workers Drop New Single, First Listen Available Here

Daniel Jackson
Beloved Indie-Rock Outfit The Wheel Workers Drop New Single, First Listen Available Here

AS LEAD SINGER, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist for Houston indie-rock band The Wheel Workers (actually, “indie-rock” doesn’t really describe the scope of the band’s ambitions, but we’ll get to that), Steven Higginbotham has been the band’s keeper-of-the-flame for over two decades, most recently shepherding the group through the perils of the pandemic to record what may be their finest album in an already deep catalog.


That album, titled Harbor, a word meant to evoke the comfort and affirmation friends and family provide, is due to drop via Sinkhole Texas Records later this summer. In the meantime, fans of the band and anyone hungry for tuneful, whisper-to-a-scream outer limits rock and roll can check out the band’s brand new single, “Day After Day,” available Friday, July 22 on all streaming platforms.

Sonically “Day After Day” is shape shifting beauty, like something Porcupine Tree might have cooked up after sharing one to many beers with Frank Black and the Pixies. Much like those prog-punk compadres, Higginbotham — with the help of his fellow Wheel Workers, guitarist Craig Wilkins, keyboardist and singer Erin Rodgers, bassist Zeek Garcia, and drummer Kevin Radomski — will more often than not pull the proverbial rug out from under the listener, though always at the service of the song. Toward the final climax of “Day After Day,” you can feel Higginbotham’s anger at his own sense of resignation rise as he howls, “I’ve trained my heart to let go / day after day . . .” over pounding caveman-like groove that finally hits a wall of squelching synths.

Day After Day www.youtube.com

“The new album is all about overcoming difficulties,” says Higginbotham. “Facing down nightmares, rebuilding your life, and figuring out who and what matters after everything you took for granted burns down.” With all of that in mind, Higginbotham asked Houston artist T. Lavois Thiebaud, a friend and collaborator of Rodgers, to create the artwork and a stop-animation video for the album’s first single, “S.O.S.”, as well as art for the singles “Suck It Up, and now “Day After Day.” “T has such a unique and compelling vision,” says Higginbotham.

To visually complement the apocalyptic mood of “Day After Day,” Thiebaud has created an unsettling, surreal landscape, reminiscent of Salvador Dali’s nightmarish terrains or the Max Ernst at his most bizarre. At the other end of the spectrum, Theibaud’s bright and beautiful artwork for the cover of Harbor, where two young women framed by a yellow sun sit face to face in a collaged landscape of sand and ocean waves, their legs interlocked, right arms raised and foreheads touching, is an image of intimacy and resilience.

Higginbotham, who holds down a day job as an attorney, is now fully recovered from a fractured larynx, and injury that threatened to end his career as a singer. “We’ve all been through hard times lately,” says Higginbotham. “I have become much closer to my family and friends as a sort of ‘harbor’ during all of life’s turbulence. I think the album cover really captures a feeling of finding solace in one another. It’s just a wonderful piece of art.”

Art + Entertainment
Thrive & Inspire: Kathy Anderson and Eklektik Team Happy ‘When Clients Are Happy’

Kathy Anderson, Eklektik Interiors Owner and Principal Designer, & the Eklektik team

WHAT WAS THE highlight of 2022 at your business? Winning Best of Show at the 2022 ASID Ruby Awards was very exciting. It was an honor to be recognized and supported by amazing industry partners and friends.

Keep Reading Show less

Spritzes at Tavola

WHILE FALL WEATHER might still be a couple of weeks away (boooo), Houston restaurants are rolling out new patio-friendly brunch menus just in time for al fresco season! From spritz carts to toast topped with caviar, these new brunches have it all for fall.

Keep Reading Show less
Food

Alex Au-Yeung (photo by Jenn Duncan)

WHEN IT OPENED a few months ago, The Woodlands outpost of acclaimed Katy restaurant Phat Eatery was billed as Alex Au-Yeung's dream restaurant. Unfortunately, Au-Yeung never got to see it come to fruition, as he passed away earlier this year. But the James Beared-nominated chef-owner certainly left his mark — and in honor of what would be his 53rd birthday, operating partners Kevin Lee and Marvin He have organized two pop-up tribute dinners.

Keep Reading Show less
Food