Orlando Weekly - November 24, 2021

Page 33

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SEASONAL DEPRESSION Dark electronic duo Wingtips returns to Orlando, where they have deep roots BY MATTHEW MOYER

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ne of the unique, and often overlooked, joys of the Panic for connecting him and his band to new audiences and holidays for local music heads is when prodigal new friends here. “I have to thank Nick Mariano for introducmusicians return home for a visit and — hey, what ing me to the community,” he says, “and for being a consistent the hell — decide to play a show or two, creatively checking in conduit to playing gigs [and] all the happenings locally.” with their community and communicating through art to old Despite an image that merges the fashionable, angular dysfriends and family. topia of Blade Runner with vampiric glam, Segretario honestly Obviously that didn’t happen too much last year, but we enjoys returning home to all of the kitsch, sunny weirdness think things will be different this autumn and winter. Case in that suffuses Central Florida. “I unabashedly love the corny point: Chicago’s Wingtips playing a short run of Florida dates tourist stuff,” he says. “I think there’s something fascinating, over the long Thanksgiving weekend. for better or worse, about extreme commercialism. Perhaps Wait. Wingtips? The stylish and severe duo, formed in it is because I grew up here, in these surroundings and I now 2015, that have been creating a potent have a twisted nostalgia for them.” hybrid of swooning post-punk (think And Central Florida’s fans of gothic, WINGTIPS Chameleons) and precise electro-pop electronic and related darker musics have with Vision Video, Violet that has firmly established them as ones a complementary fondness for them. Silhouette to watch within gothic music and the “The shows we’ve played on this tour wider underground? 8 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 27 thus far have been fantastic, and I think The very same. Vincent Segretario that our response abroad is definitely Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave. and Hannah Avalon may live in the relative to how we’re typically received willspub.org Windy City but we’re calling dibs for in Florida,” agrees Segretario. “Perhaps $12-$15 the City Beautiful since Segretario is even more well-received than in other originally from the area. areas of the country, in fact! Such a great, Indeed, some of the sleeper gigs of the last handful of diverse connection of scenes and communities. Our live show years for darkly inclined local listeners have been Wingtips’ is more intense than it was our last time in town, and more holiday-adjacent appearances. An introductory show at the in the vein of our new record while not skimping out on the Falcon, a state-of-the-art barn-burner at Stonewall, and then older songs that people like.” a kinetic DJ set from Segretario at Stonewall the next year That aforementioned new record is Cutting Room Floor. were mandatory attendance deals. (To say nothing of a storm- Released in September, it’s another step forward for the band, ing set at the 2019 iteration of Absolution Fest in Tampa, with bigger hooks and choruses, soaring vocals courtesy of where the duo held their own against heavies like Twin both Segretario and Avalon, gleaming electronics and an Tribes and Assemblage 23,, but that’s a story for another day.) undeniable dark-pop savvy. There are some heavy thematics Segretario credits local mover Nick Mariano of Überbahn/ underpinning the songs too.

PHOTO BY CARLOS AZUARA

“In cinema, the ‘cutting room floor’ is the point where it is decided which footage will make it into the film’s final cut,” reflects Segretario. “Many of the songs are rooted in this idea of editing your own life to become the best version of yourself. We wanted to talk about how progress in life isn’t linear and we sometimes have to go through trial and error to find ourselves on the other end.” Though Cutting Room Floor is an enjoyable home listening experience, we think that where this band really shines is in the live realm. Bringing their own custom light setup (and fog machine, naturally), Wingtips are able to create their own environments, remaking a typical club into something worthy of, say, Danceteria or Limelight. “When we first started out, we used nothing. Then, at some point the lack of atmosphere wasn’t cutting it, so we began using a few of our own stage lights that would fade colors slowly,” says Segretario. “Even that made a world of difference. Then I learned the basics of DMX programming, and was able to create a light show that went with our setlist.” As befits a band as visually savvy as Wingtips, their most recent new work is a music video for “Run for Shelter.” Promo video might be too reductive of a term; it’s more of a lush, stylized and cinematic dance piece. “The video for ‘Run for Shelter’ was produced with New York-based visionary Neil Schwartz, an incredible choreographer-producer,” recalls Segretario. “One day he released a video/choreography piece to our song ‘Sentinel’ online. It blew us away, and we knew that we had to produce something with him!” Since it’s the season, after all, Orlando Weekly can’t help but prod Segretario about navigating the ever-thorny waters of looking a little different and feeling the outsider when around family over the holidays. “I can’t say I have any distinct pieces of advice other than just being yourself no matter what,” says Segretario. “Once you lose touch with that, you become disillusioned to your own self, which is a pit of despair. We’re lucky to have had the support of my immediate family, and they’re our biggest fans!” Give thanks this weekend for that.

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NOV. 24-30, 2021 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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