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    • The Flashcubes
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SPLITSVILLE (Baltimore, MD)

BIG STIR RECORDS proudly welcomes to our roster: SPLITSVILLE. The indie rock pride of Baltimore, MD, the band is widely recognized as one of the leading lights of the late-'90s power pop renaissance, linked by shared membership with the equally-lionized GREENBERRY WOODS. Card-carrying members of the Power Pop Hall Of Fame, they return after two-decade hiatus with an audaciously ambitious all-new album that's also as immediate and melodically inviting as anything that came before.

SPLTSVILLE was formed in 1994 by identical twins Brandt and Matt Huseman of the critically acclaimed power pop band The Greenberry Woods, along with bassist/keyboardist Paul Krysiak. Their home-recorded debut album, Splitsville USA (1996), was a raw and energetic introduction to the band’s aesthetic, showcasing their knack for crafting short, punchy, and irresistible tunes. Ultrasound (1997), the band’s first studio album, demonstrated a more sophisticated approach to songwriting while retaining their signature energy. By the time they released Repeater (1998), the band had fully hit their stride, producing some of their most enduring material, with one review calling it "...a smorgasbord of great pop influenced equally by The Beatles, The Zombies, Queen, and the harder side of The Jam." During this time, Splitsville also built a reputation for their electrifying live performances.

The band cemented their place in the Power Pop Hall Of Fame – alongside veteran genre greats 20/20, The Spongetones and The Flashcubes, now Splitsville's labelmates on the combined Big Stir Records/SpyderPop Records roster – with The Complete Pet Soul (2001). A concept album paying homage to mid-'60s pop, it also earned an All Music Guide rating of 4½ stars and praise that "the (original) orchestral tracks are nicely balanced with several new songs that recall the low-voltage, almost folk-rock sound that predominated on the original U.S. edition of Rubber Soul." The impetus to replicate these lush songs on stage led to the addition of Tony Waddy, guitarist/vocalist extraordinaire, who helped solidify Splitsville’s sound. The four-piece explored new sonic territories with Incorporated (2003), hailed by Popmatters as “musical magic perpetrated by veteran power pop rockers… their latest and arguably greatest yet.”

Soon after Incorporated’s release and subsequent international tour, the band took an extended hiatus, allowing the members to pursue individual projects and get much, much older. A career-to-date anthology, Let's Go!: The Best Of Splitsville, burnished the band's reputation, but fans would have to wait until this year for new music. It's on the horizon at last, heralded by the single “Beth Steel,” whose heady hooks and sharply-observed lyrics are emblematic of the new album Mobtown, a love letter to their hometown of Baltimore that expands on their timeless sound. We at Big Stir Records are delighted to bring you... SPLITSVILLE, together again and at the absolute height of their powers.

Official SPLITSVILLE Website

More Official SPLITSVILLE Merch

Mobtown - CD - Splitsville "Mobtown"
  • Mobtown - CD - Splitsville "Mobtown"

Mobtown - CD - Splitsville "Mobtown"

Includes a download of the album Mobtown

The 2025 album "Mobtown" by Splitville on CD in a DigiPak

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Mobtown - CD - Splitsville "Mobtown"

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Splitsville Logo Unisex Classic Tee Black
  • Splitsville Logo Unisex Classic Tee Black

Splitsville Logo Unisex Classic Tee Black

The 100% cotton unisex classic tee will help you land a more structured look. It sits nicely, maintains sharp lines around the edges, and goes perfectly with layered streetwear outfits. Plus, it's extra trendy now!

• 100% cotton
• Sport Grey is 90% cotton, 10% polyester
• Ash Grey is 99% cotton, 1% polyester
• Heather colors are 50% cotton, 50% polyester
• Fabric weight: 5.0–5.3 oz/yd² (170-180 g/m²)
• Open-end yarn
• Tubular fabric
• Taped neck and shoulders
• Double seam at sleeves and bottom hem
• Blank product sourced from Honduras, Nicaragua, Haiti, Dominican Republic, Bangladesh, Mexico

Disclaimers: 
• Due to the fabric properties, the White color variant may appear off-white rather than bright white.
• Dark color speckles throughout the fabric are expected for the color Natural.

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Mobtown by Splitsville

Mobtown

Splitsville

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Mobtown

Splitsville
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CD - Splitsville "Mobtown" Download

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It is with great pride that BIG STIR RECORDS announces the July 18 release of the new album MOBTOWN from veteran indie rockers SPLITSVILLE – the first album since 2003 from the revered Power Pop Hall Of Famers, already Read more

It is with great pride that BIG STIR RECORDS announces the July 18 release of the new album MOBTOWN from veteran indie rockers SPLITSVILLE – the first album since 2003 from the revered Power Pop Hall Of Famers, already heralded by strong global airplay for the lead single “Beth Steel” with “A Glorious Lie” to follow in the coming days. MOBTOWN, a ten-track love letter to the band's hometown of Baltimore, is up for pre-order and pre-save now:

https://orcd.co/splitsville-mobtown

From its first track, the supercharged literal re-introduction “Cold Open”, MOBTOWN is immediately and viscerally striking as a hooks-forward, radio-ready collection of stellar power pop. That's evident from the driving guitars, immaculate melodies and big harmonies ringing through loud and clear on the early singles, and in fact on all of the tracks offered up here. To the longtime fans who've waited for over two decades for new material, it all sounds like SPLITSVILLE at the top of their game; to the uninitiated it might evoke Fountains Of Wayne or the most melodic work of '90s alt-rockers like Weezer. But a deeper dive starts to reveal textures and ambitions, both musical and lyrical, that make the record much more than “just” a pitch-perfect guitar pop album.

It's clear that the band hasn't reunited for the sake of nostalgia, although their legacy would allow for that: formed in 1994 by identical twins BRANDT and MATT HUSEMAN of the beloved power pop band THE GREENBERRY WOODS along with bassist/keyboardist PAUL KRYSIAK and later adding lead guitarist TONY WADDY, SPLITSVILLE was one of the leading lights of the turn-of-the-century guitar pop revival. From their home-recorded debut through 2003, their initial run yielded five critically acclaimed albums including genre classics like Repeater (1998) and the retro-focused concept record The Complete Pet Soul (2001). They've been missed, but the audacity of the new album indicates that SPLITSVILLE have returned not only with their melodic gifts and powerful sonics intact, but with heady new ambitions.

Between the title of the album and the lyrical concerns of the singles “Beth Steel” (an urgent character study of a former employee of Maryland's now-shuttered Bethlehem Steel plant) and “A Glorious Lie” (drawn from a tale of Baltimore's Belvedere Hotel and a 1926 visit from the Queen of Romania), the overarching themes of MOBTOWN have already begun to declare themselves: this is a hometown affair for SPLITSVILLE. “It's a concept album, but all of our albums have been at some level. We still focused on the best songwriting, this time using Baltimore as a mirror or microcosm to address societal and personal issues,” explains Matt Huseman. A quote from novelist Richard Price -- "Baltimore, in fact, is chaos theory incarnate" – was included in the band's writing manifesto for the album, and local landmarks and neighborhoods lend their names to a number of the record's songs. “On Federal Hill”, a soaring tune with appropriately martial drum flourishes, takes the loss of historical awareness as its key concern, while the ridiculously catchy consumerism takedown “I Hate Going To Hutzler's” borrows the name of the defunct Maryland department store chain whose flagship store appears on the album's sleeve art. Both “Gray” with its soulful swagger and the jangling “Southern Hospitality” address the long-standing racial divisions that continue to shape the city's cultural landscape. Heady stuff for a pop record, but Splitsville have been challenging themselves to push such boundaries all along.

The time-tripping ambition to document Baltimore in all its contradictory splendor via what the band calls “a magical realism or at least a historical mash-up approach to the lyrics” inspires some surprising musical exploration as well. Thus “Fallsway”, inspired by Paul Krysiak's love of Carole King and Christine McVie, spins off into overt nods to Elvis Costello and Steely Dan, and the string-laden coda of “Fallsway” is simply jaw-dropping. And with each listen to MOBTOWN, the listener picks up on even more influences. There’s big '90s-sounding rock, Prince-influenced soul, bits of Van Halen, Flaming Lips, Johnny Cash, Cheap Trick, MGMT… the list goes on. Nonetheless, it all sounds like one effortlessly cohesive whole; perhaps that, too, is a function of holding up a mirror to the diversity of Baltimore itself.

The record closes with a pair of heartbreaking slower tunes boasting some of the strongest melodies on a record overflowing with them. The titles of both, unsurprisingly, namecheck Baltimore geography: “Perry Hall” with its harrowing refrain of “all that's left is emptiness”, and the more celebratory (albeit unflinching) “Penn Station”. Here we find the conceptual and emotional core of MOBTOWN laid bare, expressed firstly in one couplet – “This city’s gonna fall apart / But I love it anyway” – and then in a single word, the last one heard in the song and on the album: “home”.

MOBTOWN, then, is an album that not only marks the return of a crucial band from the late-century power pop renaissance, but easily stands with their finest work. In its detailed portrait of a singular place and its history and culture, it approaches the lyrical heights of the peak period Kinks while sonically representing a Tarantino-esque melange of the best records of the last 60+ years of popular music. It's fueled by an audacity that one wishes more indie pop bands on a too-often backwards-looking scene would take to heart. As that scene welcomes back one of its own, it's more than enough that, in MOBTOWN, SPLITSVILLE have brought us something of a masterpiece, and one of the best albums of any kind that 2025 is likely to offer.

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  1. 1
    Cold Open 3:23
    Cold Open
    by Splitsville

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  2. 2
    A Glorious Lie 3:33
    A Glorious Lie
    by Splitsville

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  3. 3
    On Federal Hill 4:15
    On Federal Hill
    by Splitsville

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  4. 4
    Southern Hospitality 4:03
    Southern Hospitality
    by Splitsville

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  5. 5
    Gray 4:51
    Gray
    by Splitsville

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  6. 6
    I Hate Going to Hutzler's 3:24
    I Hate Going to Hutzler's
    by Splitsville

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  7. 7
    Fallsway 3:48
    Fallsway
    by Splitsville

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  8. 8
    Beth Steel 3:47
    Beth Steel
    by Splitsville

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  9. 9
    Perry Hall 4:07
    Perry Hall
    by Splitsville

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  10. 10
    Penn Station 3:30
    Penn Station
    by Splitsville

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A Glorious Lie by Splitsville

A Glorious Lie

Splitsville

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A Glorious Lie

Splitsville
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As the countdown to the first album in two decades from indie pop icons SPLITSVILLE continues, Big Stir Records brings you the second preview single from the record: “A Glorious Lie”, out July 4 (two weeks ahead of the Read more

As the countdown to the first album in two decades from indie pop icons SPLITSVILLE continues, Big Stir Records brings you the second preview single from the record: “A Glorious Lie”, out July 4 (two weeks ahead of the album MOBTOWN) and up for pre-order and pre-save now:

https://orcd.co/splitsville-agl

The announcement of the new album MOBTOWN from long-dormant Power Pop Hall Of Famers SPLITSVILLE has taken the indie pop world by surprise, and the strength of the first single “Beth Steel” has left fans old and new eager for more. Critics and DJs who've heard the full album (out July 18 on CD and Streaming and available for pre-order now) are already marveling at its balance of radio-ready hooks and thematic ambition. What the band – founding members BRANDT and MATT HUSEMAN (also of THE GREENBERRY WOODS) and PAUL KRYSIAK, joined by Splitsvillian since 2001 TONY WADDY – have crafted is a ten-track love letter to their hometown of Baltimore in all its complex and contradictory splendor, delivered with all the power and melodic acumen for which they're known.

Nowhere is that balance of irresistible ear candy and local literary lyricism more evident than on the new single “A Glorious Lie”. It's the kind of compact, hard-hitting pop tune might've been a hit in any decade from the '70s through today. To longtime followers, it will sound just like Splitsville at the height of their powers; to the uninitiated, its driving guitars, big harmonies and sweet synth lines might evoke Fountains Of Wayne or the pop side of Weezer. As glorious as it is on first listen, there's intriguing imagery within the lyrics that invites deeper investigation: “the King of Charm City,” “the Queen of Romania” and her three hundred roses... as the lyrics themselves ask, what does it mean?

Unsurprisingly, the answer lies in the historical lore of Baltimore itself, as SPLITSVILLE explain. “A Baltimore Magazine article called Secrets Of The Belvedere led to this fictional (unrequited) love story. It’s ostensibly from the point of view of William Francis Riesner, who was named maitre d’hotel of the iconic Baltimore hotel in 1919. Seven years later, in 1926, Queen Marie of Romania visited. There was a great gala held in her honor, where: 'the Ballroom [was] filled with hundreds of the Queen’s most favorite, fragrant roses.' Whether or not she brought a lady-in-waiting named Nadia with her is lost to time.”

Taken together, “A Glorious Lie” and the equally addictive indie hit lead single “Beth Steel” (an empathetic character sketch of a former Bethlehem Steel plant supervisor) begin to suggest the richness of the MOBTOWN project. Here's an album which, in its exploration of the history and culture of Baltimore as a mirror or microcosm to address societal and personal issues, approaches the lyrical heights of the peak period Kinks while sonically representing a Tarantino-esque melange of the best records of the last 60+ years of popular music. It's a goal one wishes more indie pop bands would take to heart, but there's no need: SPLITSVILLE have absolutely nailed it on MOBTOWN, and the pop rock world is already beginning to catch on.

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  1. 1
    A Glorious Lie 3:33
    A Glorious Lie
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Beth Steel by Splitsville

Beth Steel

Splitsville

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Beth Steel

Splitsville
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Big Stir Records is thrilled to bring you the news: SPLITSVILLE is back. The celebrated indie rock quartet, dormant since 2003, becomes the fourth Power Pop Hall Of Fame inductee on the combined BSR/SpyderPop roster, and Read more

Big Stir Records is thrilled to bring you the news: SPLITSVILLE is back. The celebrated indie rock quartet, dormant since 2003, becomes the fourth Power Pop Hall Of Fame inductee on the combined BSR/SpyderPop roster, and more importantly, return with new music that stands with their very best. The band's new single “Beth Steel” - the first preview of a forthcoming album due this Summer - will see release on all on all digital platforms June 6, and is up for pre-order and pre-save now:

https://orcd.co/splitsville-bethsteel

“They're burning down the empire, but the trains still run on time”: that's the brash opening couplet on SPLITSVILLE's new single, and it's guaranteed to turn a few heads. Equally arresting is the sound of the new song, with churning guitars joined by a loping, Revolver-esque drumbeat leading up to a lush, yearning chorus (“You can't run away from yourself”) and a bridge to die for. It's clear that the band hasn't reunited for the sake of nostalgia, although their legacy would allow for that: formed in 1994 by identical twins BRANDT and MATT HUSEMAN of the beloved power pop band THE GREENBERRY WOODS along with bassist/keyboardist PAUL KRYSIAK and later adding TONY WADDY, SPLITSVILLE was one of the leading lights of the turn-of-the-century guitar pop revival. From their home-recorded debut through 2003, their initial run yielded five critically acclaimed albums including genre classics like Repeater (1998) and the retro-focused concept record The Complete Pet Soul (2001). They've been missed, but the audacity of the new single indicates that SPLITSVILLE have returned not only with their melodic gifts and powerful sonics intact, but with heady new ambitions.

The title “Beth Steel” might suggest a classic power pop “girl's name” song, but there's much more at work here. And while the talk of burning empires evokes the global realities of 2025, there's something much more local – and personal – at the core of the song. It's a hint of the thematic concerns the band explore on the forthcoming album, as they explain: “From 1887 to 2012, the Bethlehem Steel mill at Sparrows Point provided steady - if dangerous - work for tens of thousands of men and women. The closing of the mill had a devastating effect on the lives of many residents of Baltimore, including a former supervisor who was Brandt’s Uber driver one evening. She inspired the lyrics to this song.”

Welcome, then, to MOBTOWN, SPLITSVILLE's self-described love letter to their hometown of Baltimore. “Beth Steel” is one of the ten tracks that constitute the song cycle of the new album, and it's emblematic of the band's ambitious approach. “It's a concept album, but all of our albums have been at some level. We still focused on the best songwriting, this time using Baltimore as a mirror/microcosm to address societal and personal issues,” says Matt. “We also tried to make this album sound better than anything we’ve released prior.” They succeed in dazzling fashion, tapping into the rich history and texture of a singular place through sharp character sketches -- some humorous, some heartbreaking, all captivating and married with some of the most powerful and sophisticated pop hooks you'll hear this year. Release details are forthcoming, but for now, crank up “Beth Steel” and know that SPLITSVILLE is back... and they mean business.

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    Beth Steel 3:47
    Beth Steel
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