
Culture Wars
Rickshaw Stop
∙
San Francisco
Friday, May 15 at 9 pm PDT
Serves Food
Outdoor Patio
Concert Venue
Bar
Friday, May 15 at 9 pm PDT
Serves Food
Outdoor Patio
Concert Venue
Bar
Entry Options
Details
Description
Live 105 x Popscene Co-Presents:
SOUNDCHECK NITE!
with
CULTURE WARS
Friday, 5/15
@ Rickshaw Stop
8pm doors, 9pm show, all ages welcome
$20.00 advance, $25.00 day of show
CULTURE WARS
The debut album from Culture Wars arrives ready to connect with a generation starved for authenticity and provocation in their rock bands. The young group’s energizing and unapologetically moving if not now, when? is a breath of fresh air full of ambition and pure intentions.
As the band’s name implies, seemingly disparate passions battle within the songs, somehow beautifully making peace. Alex Dugan, David Grayson, Dillon Randolph, Caleb Contreras, and Joshua Stirm share a collective chemistry and integrity.
They composed the album remotely, with Dugan in Sydney, Australia, and Contreras in Los Angeles (except for one song, “Lips,” written at the Wynn Casino). It was essential to all of them, and Contreras (who also produced) in particular, that each composition work as a vocal and acoustic guitar melody or a vocal and piano bit first. As a result, everything on the album sounds fresh, organic, real, and yet highly modern.
Recording for if not now, when? took place at Sonic Ranch Recording Studio, on a massive pecan farm 30 minutes outside El Paso, Texas, on the Mexican border; Hollywood’s United Recording (Sinatra, Radiohead); and Sunset Sound (Prince, The Doors).
The resulting album from those sessions and beyond is a stunning debut full-length delivering on the promise of the group’s early EPs and then some. The appropriately titled if not now, when? combines the past, present, and future with bold swagger.
“Heaven” is a straight-up rock song juxtaposed through the lens of the R&B/pop style production beloved by Contreras (whose credits include THEY and Kacey Musgraves). “Wasting My Time” incorporates electronic elements with a driving pulse reminiscent of surf rock. “Miley” pays homage to the romantic pop of the ‘80s, while “Slowly” would’ve sounded right at home on MTV’s 120 Minutes. Elsewhere on the album, Culture Wars conjures bits of classic country, owing much to the band’s collective Texan upbringing.
All the songs share a postmodern sensibility that anchors them to the present moment.
Culture Wars initially built a following through word-of-mouth and energetic live performances. Manny Marroquin (Rihanna, The Weeknd) mixed their 2021 EP, teche. Songs like “Faith” and “Lose Money” blew up on streaming services, contributing to the group’s widening audience. “Leave Me Alone,” featured on the GRAMMY-nominated Bill & Ted Face the Music soundtrack, enjoyed an organic boost from mega-influencers and became Culture Wars’ first Top 30 Alternative Rock hit.
Culture Wars’ breathtaking debut LP is a satisfying full-circle moment. It blends everything they love and emphasizes the importance of actual guitars, bass, drums, and synth. “We’re reinvigorated with a sound we’d aimed toward for a long time,” Alex says.
“Some songs sound similar to each other in genre, some are a little bit different, but as a whole, when you put it together, that’s Culture Wars,” David notes. “We’ve always done that. There’s a taste of everything in there, and we love it this way.”

