For immediate release:

September 22, 2022


LA INDIE-POP QUARTET

ATTA BOY

ANNOUNCE THIRD STUDIO ALBUM

CRAB PARK

DUE OUT 

OCTOBER 21


PRE-ORDER THE LP HERE


& SHARE

SINGLE & VIDEO

"DEEP SEA LADDER"

OUT TODAY


LISTEN HERE | WATCH THE VIDEO HERE

Album artwork credit: Lewis Pullman | Download hi-res LP artwork

"“Boys” is an intense introspection on the band itself — its tangle of relationships and individuals with their own dreams and fears. its buoyant riffs and Brolin’s crystalline vocals, almost betrays its hidden bleakness. But ultimately it’s bittersweet and reflective of life and the evolution of longtime friendships."

"Atta Boy balances sweet and sour/edgy and accessible, with a sure hand and narrower concentration that comes with waiting nearly a decade to record again."

"Atta Boy possess unrivaled artistry."

"['Shade' is a] sweet-sounding song that hides a dark heart under its soft piano chords."

Photo credit: Sarah Midkiff | Download hi-res

Today, LA indie-pop quartet Atta Boy announce their long-awaited third studio album Crab Park due out October 21 and available for pre-order now, along with contemplative single + video "Deep Sea Ladder," where the band swims in the freedom of embracing their own insecurities. 


Atta Boy's third studio album Crab Park is a pacifying body of work that feels like a candle in a dark room–a quiet guiding light that evokes a particular sense of serenity. With album art designed by the band's own Lewis Pullman (drums), the ten track body of work allows the band to thoughtfully reflect on the varied aspects of change–nostalgia, an ever-changing understanding of home, the value of meaningful friendship and the vulnerability that comes with embracing the full, broad spectrum of emotions throughout life's highs and lows. With imaginative song structures and twirling melodies, Crab Park is a buoyant celebration of the natural cycle of living, dying, dissolving, and reforming, ultimately, perpetually in bloom.


On the latest track "Deep Sea Ladder," Eden Brolin sings with unbounded honesty, "I know this house is sinking, every shingle out of line / I know this house is broken, you remind me all the time / But this house is mine." It's an intimate, pensive tune that sees the narrator take ownership of their flaws and insecurities where they find freedom in their own faults.


The process of writing "Deep Sea Ladder," Brolin explains, "was written as an exercise In an effort to practice writing songs more quickly and with less judgment. The exercise involved going through literature and sort of randomly finding words and placing them together in different variations as a jumping off point." Landing on the words "Deep Sea Ladder" Brolin continues, "stuck out as it made me think of something I was grappling with at the time and through that allowance of curiosity that image continued to be fleshed out. The band was vital in finding colors in the music and production that fill out the story more vibrantly."


Guitarist Freddy Reish had a vision for the track to feel like a bellowing ocean, and after playing around and experimenting with an emulator of a Juno 60 keyboard, he found just the right sound. The ending, however, needed more chaos. To do this, Reish says, "I tuned every string on my guitar to the same note, put on as much distortion as possible and shook my guitar right into the monitor and got the feedback that was needed to close out the song."


Dashel Thompson, the band's keyboardist, recalls how the track clicked almost immediately for the band, and after a few versions were thrown around, is thrilled with the final  result. Thompson says, "The song has great dynamics, some very cool chord changes, and is generally a lot of fun to play. We went through a few iterations on the piano part - bits and pieces from each of them are in the final song and I’m super happy with how it turned out."


The accompanying video, directed and drawn by David Delafuente, uses a method of hand drawn rotoscopy on paper with pencil, depicting sketches that neatly complement the track's words and instrumentation. Over three weeks, Delafuente animated the video in his New York apartment and adjusted his drawing style overtime to match the intricacies of the track. Providing insight into the process, Delafuente shares, "I wanted to create portraits of "Domestic Intimacy" - images of beds, kitchens, windows, and the figures that inhabit these interior spaces. Throughout the song, there was the illustrative lyric "This House Is Mine.." which for me became the viewpoint. It spoke about ownership over insecurities and doubts." Delafuente continues, "During production I felt my images were not being honest. I did not see insecurity being portrayed. I changed my drawing style to be more free, less intense and more flawed lines. I really like the small moments in the video where the marks are off - I think that's the whole point."


Watch "Deep Sea Ladder" (Official Music Video)


Today's announcement follows the nostalgia-tinged "Spring Seventeen" and its dreamy video that captures the way memories transform as time passes. The first single, "Boys," is a track that laid the foundation for the writing process to come and embodies the group's deep-rooted, longtime friendship. It serves as a reminder that amidst chaos and uncertainty, they have each other. Its accompanying lyric video, Pullman features handwritten lyrics dotted with doodles surrounding the lettering that matches the track's beat. Watch the official "Boys" lyric video here.


Listeners and tastemakers alike have praised the band's comeback track and are eagerly awaiting what's in store. GrimyGoods wrote "Boys" is "Armed with jaunty guitars and an infectiously passionate melancholy" and included on their 5 Songs to Listen to if You're in an LA Mood list, The Honey POP described it as "...the closing sequence of your favorite indie teen movie about navigating friendship and growing up when things have come to a happy conclusion."


Atta Boy began as a high school band, and after their first year in college, the group made a whimsical project in the summer of 2012 that became their debut album, Out of Sorts. Eden Brolin (vocals) Dashel Thompson (piano) Freddy Reish (guitar) and Lewis Pullman (drums) didn't expect anyone outside of their friends and family to hear it, but to their surprise, it captured listeners in over 70 countries. Eight years later, after pursuing individual endeavors, the band reunited to release their follow-up LP, Big Heart Mannerswhich caught the attention of several leading tastemakers like American SongwriterAtwood Magazine and The FADER. Now, in 2022, with millions of streams on Spotify and a captivated audience of over 240,790 monthly listeners, Atta Boy are back to capture the intricacies of not only life's highs and lows, but the smaller, in between, seemingly trivial moments that make one feel most alive.


The profoundly resolute track "Deep Sea Ladder" is out everywhere now, along with its emblematic hand drawn video. The third studio album by Atta Boy, Crab Park, is due out October 21 and available for pre-order now. Find Atta Boy on Instagram, Facebook, YouTube and Twitter, shop Atta Boy merch here and stay tuned for much more from the rising four-piece.


Listen: "Spring Seventeen" | Watch

Listen: "Boys" | Watch: "Boys" (Lyric Video)

Album artwork credit: Lewis Pullman 

Download hi-res LP artwork

Crab Park (LP) Tracklisting


01. Crab Park

02. Spring Seventeen

03. Blue Moon

04. Steller's Jay

05. We Ran From Midnight

06. Deep Sea Ladder

07. Alex

08. It Goes Away

09. Boys

10. Twin Flame


Photo credit: Sarah Midkiff | Download hi-res

Atta Boy Bio:


Resurfacing like cicadas, L.A.-born Atta Boy has never been in a hurry. Instead, responding to some strange seasonal instinct when it comes to recording, their unique, beguiling, comforting, and yet aching blend of pop-Americana seems to arrive in waves, well-formed, fully-gestated, yet hungry and soul-searching. Mixing indie influences with coffee-shop confessionalism, the quartet first found eachother in the hazy days of high school. Navigating the high-strung emotional peaks and valleys of American adolescence, this close-knit crew shaped those experiences into a considerably mature debut, 2012’s Out of Sorts, to be released before they were old enough to order a drink. And then they disappeared.


The lifelong friends recorded a steller introduction, then, like dandelion tendrils tossed to the wind, dispersed to discover themselves. “I didn’t think of myself as in a band,” recalls lead singer Eden Brolin, “we’d recorded a record.” But the four kept in touch, and the record began to make the rounds like a lazy ‘78 discovered in a dusty basement, evoking a warm nostalgia that would come to mark the band’s particular style. In time, word-of-mouth would carry their debut like a rumor. Evolving from a whisper in first period to an anthem by last-bell, and the fans sprouted-up like wildflowers.


“It was almost like we were some urban legend,” muses keyboardist Dashel Thompson, `the album existed, and we existed, but Atta Boy was hibernating.” While the group was collecting themselves, they remained in close contact, and eight years later, drummer Lewis Pullman sought to recapture that first spark like a lightning bug in a mason jar with a rousing group text reading: ”Alright gang…we’ve got money in the bank, we’ve got songs unsung, strings to strum, and a summer that’s begging and pleading for us to make something of it.”


“We should make a record. Easy peasy lemon motherfuckin’ squeezy.” And it was settled.


Returning in 2020 with their follow up, Big Heart Manners, Atta Boy skirted the sophomore slump by delivering yet another wise-beyond-their-years collection of warm, inviting, and at-times even raucous tunes that built up from breezy pianos and shuffling riffs into explosively evocative crescendos- capped by Brolin’s sweet, sentimental, and slightly strange lyrical stylings. 


“Given everything going on, the moment, with so much sadness, we felt weird releasing new music, but we didn’t want to wait around for a perfect time that would never come,” guitarist Freddy Reish relays. “Fans were reaching out, they had been reaching out, and it’s so amazing– if our music could help even a little bit, we wanted to share.” 


And the fans responded in turn. Without even a single tour, Atta Boy’s fan-base had swelled and the demand was palpable like summer heat radiating off warm asphalt. Compared to their first hiatus, their third record has mercifully followed so much faster.


Glowing with the (nearly) all-analog production tone that has become Atta Boy’s signature calling card, 2022’s Crab Park inhabits an even deeper spiritual groove– that embodies the honesty, openness, and accepted vulnerability you can only find among a group of real, old friends who managed to find some weird way to actually go home again. 


“Home…domesticity…it’s there in the record…but I think it’s more about the idea of elemental particles breaking down and reforming.” Ponders Brolin. “I think we were responding to the idea of milestones, the past and the present, how far we’ve come. How much has changed, and how much hasn’t,” agrees Thompson. 


Lyrically, title track CRAB PARK, speaks to the somehow shocking comfort found in a mutual communion between lovers, not only with each other, but with a place, and more than a place, but a place and an idea. “And I never ever thought it would be me and you at Crab Park/ With the bittersweet and final spark of Firework Friday/ Can’t explain it if I wanted to…” Brolin coos as she explores the intimacy of a delightfully discovered, unexpectedly perfectly-imperfect reality.  


Yet here they all are again, the old friends with new stories to share. Back-end barn-burner, BOYS, also captures this catch-me-up energy. Holding court ahead of the record, Brolin brought out a notebook and asked each bandmate for five things that make them happy. “I wanted to check-in with the boys, and bring their experiences together into the album,” she explains. Still, even this happy homecoming is tinged by the bittersweet; lyrically leading to questions like, “What’s home when home’s where everyone’s gone/ and a bed is made in every town?”


Finding themselves between the nostalgic interplay of roadhouse piano and barroom balladeering, Atta Boy still comes off mostly upbeat and endearing. Their inventive song structures and swelling melodies reveal a bolstered confidence that, coupled with toe-tapping tempos, charmingly carry listeners through thoughtful meditations that just can’t help but reveal a hallowed hollow for that which is lost, and that which is yet to be found.


In their most contemplative moments they aren’t afraid of wandering the halls of memory. Single DEEP SEA LADDER puts this knowing form of nostalgia on full display as Brolin belts: “I know this house is sinking, every shingle out of line/ But this house is mine.” It’s a neat trick she somehow pulls off over and over, both owning the moment and admitting to only a transient and groping apprehension of the tiny gestures that make up a whole, beautiful life. 


All that to say, this band of old-neighborhood besties aren’t at all naive about the pitfalls of the past. Atta Boy willingly acknowledge the honeytrap of the good-old-days and evoke a wisened awareness of their still rising trajectory. As seen on the mean memory-trip that is SPRING SEVENTEEN, a touching little ditty wholly embracing the saccharine reality inherent in wonton reminiscing, Brolin soulfully sings, “Lost in a brief memory/ like a song you get used to/ loosen the grip of reverie…I don’t know you like I used to.”


It’s in this spirit of entropy and negentropy that Atta Boy have once again found themselves coalescing around a shared, collective pang that drives their collaboration and their joyful celebration of all things living, dying, dissolving, and reforming– like a perennial posy pushing through the underbrush to bloom under the first shouts of springtime sunshine, beautiful and golden. Again. And again.

For more information on Atta Boy, please visit:


WebsiteInstagram | Facebook | Twitter | YouTube | Soundcloud | Bandcamp


For all Atta Boy press materials and inquiries, please contact:


Leigh Greaney / leigh@bighassle.com

Romy Bayhack / romy@bighassle.com