cleopatrick

Wed Mar 19 2025

7:00 PM - 11:00 PM

SWX

15 Nelson St Bristol BS1 2JY

Under 16s with an adult

Ages 14+

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14+ (Under 16s must be with an adult)

SJM Concerts Present
cleopatrick

  • cleopatrick

    cleopatrick

    Rock

    Listening to the story of Canadian duo cleopatrick is a bit like hearing the plot of the best, most righteously validating
    coming-of-age film never made. Two friends meet aged four in Hicksville, Nowheretown (real name: Cobourg,
    Ontario, population 19,000), grow up completely inseparable, form a band and, against numerous obstacles, blossom
    into a genuine, global underground sensation. There are heroes and villains, highs and lows and, crucially, some of
    the most poetic plot twists that could seem almost too perfect, were they not completely true.

    Take the story of 2017 breakthrough track ‘hometown’ for example. “It’s one of the craziest, most ironic things that’s
    ever happened,” begins vocalist and guitarist Luke Gruntz. “I was going to college because I was too scared to put all
    my chips in the band pile, and that’s what ‘hometown’ is about: it’s a song about feeling like we’re doing all this stuff
    and we’re working so hard and we’re just never going to be heard. It’s literally a song about people probably never
    hearing our songs. And then by some act of the universe, that song ended up unlocking all the doors for us.”
    Today, cleopatrick has logged 77 million streams and counting - all from an increasingly dedicated fanbase who’ve
    found the duo, completed by drummer Ian Fraser, their own way: no major label, no big budget, just two best pals
    knuckling down, cementing a unique sonic alchemy and filling a space of honest, empathetic yet undeniably heavy-
    hitting rock music that they’d been searching for themselves for years.

    But let’s rewind back a little first, to 2002, at a Canadian kindergarten. “There were only three boys in our class, and
    as a four-year-old boy, girls are yucky,” chuckles Ian. “I remember it being Luke and another kid; the other kid hung
    around for a bit but it didn’t really stick.” “It was like that thing where, growing up, we developed our personalities
    through our relationship and that’s how we figured out who we are,” Luke continues. “If I found something cool I’d
    show Ian and we’d both like it together, and music was very much a part of that relationship.”

    Aged eight, both sets of parents conspired to purchase the two friends guitars and lessons for Christmas (“Kind of like
    an arranged wedding, but an arranged career…” Ian jokes). And from there, first messing around in school bands as
    teenagers before splintering off as the only two that really wanted to take a music career seriously (if you were
    wondering why cleopatrick are a bass player-less duo, it’s because Cobourg literally had no other prospects) began
    the seeds that would lead the pair to the present day.

    However if a childhood spent mutually nerding out to the opening note of AC/DC’s ‘Back In Black’, replaying its
    sledgehammer introduction over and over again (“It gave me butterflies every time,” the singer nods) sounds like a
    potentially ill-fitting mindset in a town like theirs, then it’s exactly this separation that cleopatrick embrace as being
    their secret weapon. “Just being where we’re from, and being pretty chilled guys, I think we never think about the
    world in the right way until something clicks for us. Even booking shows: I’d call venues asking if they would book us
    and it would just be the bartender talking to me like, ‘I just work here…’. I recently went back through our email and
    saw a bunch of those messages we’d sent to random sports bars asking to play and none of them have replies,” Luke
    recalls. “But that innocence has been our lucky key and the way we’ve been able to grow this band and keep it cool
    doing our own thing; we’re already outside the circle so we naturally just think that way and it’s something we’ve
    become really grateful for.”

    Growing older and growing into their music tastes, Luke and Ian’s blossoming love of hip hop (the pair cite Drake and
    Kendrick Lamar as particular obsessions) began to quickly seep into their songwriting. Cemented in their abilities as a
    duo (“I don’t know how we could find a third member it worked as well with, even if we tried”), it became as integral an
    element within the sonic mix as the bands they’d first fallen in love with. And so, with the MO of making rock music
    that hit as strongly as the hip hop tracks they loved, but spoke honestly about the things they knew, the spiralling
    success of ‘hometown’ soon started an increasing wave of opportunities. They toured Canada for the first time,

    played their first real headline tour and found themselves adorning the cover of Spotify’s ‘Rock This’ playlist. “I was
    working at a coffee shop and Ian was working at a hardware store and we’d be getting emails from the Head of Rock
    at Spotify asking when the next song was out,” Luke recalls. “It was like Hannah Montana, it was like we were living
    two different lives,” Ian nods.

    Since then, they’ve been “drip-feeding” new material, purposefully taking it at their own pace and doing it their own
    way; EP ‘the boys’ landed in 2018, while the last couple of years have seen a slow tease of interim singles. And
    between multiple sold out tours in Canada, the US and the UK/EU, appearances at Lollapalooza, Austin City Limits
    and Reading/Leeds, a recent Amazon Ones to Watch 2021 tip and inclusion on Apple Music playlists, the pair have
    been crafting BUMMER: a debut album that sees cleopatrick harness all the magic they’ve been brewing over their
    two-decade friendship and funnel it into a record that aims to reinvigorate the rock landscape from the ground up.
    Taking the ethos of their New Rock Mafia collective - a group of friends and fellow bands, united in making a more
    inclusive, equality-driven space in rock music - and imbuing it with the sonic ambition and ferocity of a record
    designed to be played hard and loud, BUMMER is an album made to mean something.

    “We want our music to feel as big as hip hop does in the club - big subs and loud drums and vocals right up front. But
    lyrically, we want to sing songs that everyone in the crowd feels comfortable singing along to. There’s a [historical]
    formula to rock music where people sing about drugs and alcohol and sex and it’s so fucking phony; it makes us so
    angry that kids who want to hear guitar music and get something from it and have a favourite band have to settle for
    that, and listen to these dudes lying to them,” Luke asserts. “It’s so gross to me and completely the opposite of how
    this genre started.”

    Recorded with 21-year-old NRM peer and producer Jig Dubé putting their supportive, community-driven money
    where their mouths are, cleopatrick’s debut is a time capsule of a record - nodding to their insular, small town
    beginnings (second single ‘THE DRAKE’’ was written in reference to a traumatic gig in which their high school bullies
    turned up and started punching people in the mosh pit) but reaching for something altogether more exciting, utopian
    and full of life.

    And at its heart, it’s an album about two friends, who’ve been with each other since the formative first steps that
    adorn ‘BUMMER’’s heartwarming cover images (two pictures taken by the pair’s kindergarten teacher from when
    Luke and Ian accidentally showed up to school in matching sweaters) and made something that’s a testament to the
    power of sticking to your guns.

    “To look back and reflect on the people we were at the start of all this when it was a pipedream and still feel like the
    same people, that feels cool. Although there’s a lot that’s changed, it still feels like the same vision,” Ian smiles.
    “We’ve been comparing the album to the Voyager One probe - it has everything about us in it and we don’t know if
    people will get it or if people will care, but it feels so good to have it out there,” Luke nods. “It feels like a small way to
    live forever.”

Please correct the information below.

Select ticket quantity.

Select Tickets

limit 10 per person
General Admission

Please note £1.50 venue levy included in the fees

£20.48 (£16.50 + £3.98 Fees, excluding any delivery costs)

Delivery Method

eTickets

Terms & Conditions

This event is 14 and over. Any ticket holder unable to present valid identification indicating that they are at least 14 years of age will not be admitted to this event, and will not be eligible for a refund.

Cost includes handling fee of £2 (eTickets are not always sent or available to print immediately).


eTickets will be sent separately to your order confirmation email, and will arrive up to 3 days before the show.

SJM Concerts Present

cleopatrick

Wed Mar 19 2025 7:00 PM - 11:00 PM

SWX Bristol
cleopatrick

Under 16s with an adult Ages 14+

14+ (Under 16s must be with an adult)
cleopatrick

cleopatrick

Rock

Listening to the story of Canadian duo cleopatrick is a bit like hearing the plot of the best, most righteously validating
coming-of-age film never made. Two friends meet aged four in Hicksville, Nowheretown (real name: Cobourg,
Ontario, population 19,000), grow up completely inseparable, form a band and, against numerous obstacles, blossom
into a genuine, global underground sensation. There are heroes and villains, highs and lows and, crucially, some of
the most poetic plot twists that could seem almost too perfect, were they not completely true.

Take the story of 2017 breakthrough track ‘hometown’ for example. “It’s one of the craziest, most ironic things that’s
ever happened,” begins vocalist and guitarist Luke Gruntz. “I was going to college because I was too scared to put all
my chips in the band pile, and that’s what ‘hometown’ is about: it’s a song about feeling like we’re doing all this stuff
and we’re working so hard and we’re just never going to be heard. It’s literally a song about people probably never
hearing our songs. And then by some act of the universe, that song ended up unlocking all the doors for us.”
Today, cleopatrick has logged 77 million streams and counting - all from an increasingly dedicated fanbase who’ve
found the duo, completed by drummer Ian Fraser, their own way: no major label, no big budget, just two best pals
knuckling down, cementing a unique sonic alchemy and filling a space of honest, empathetic yet undeniably heavy-
hitting rock music that they’d been searching for themselves for years.

But let’s rewind back a little first, to 2002, at a Canadian kindergarten. “There were only three boys in our class, and
as a four-year-old boy, girls are yucky,” chuckles Ian. “I remember it being Luke and another kid; the other kid hung
around for a bit but it didn’t really stick.” “It was like that thing where, growing up, we developed our personalities
through our relationship and that’s how we figured out who we are,” Luke continues. “If I found something cool I’d
show Ian and we’d both like it together, and music was very much a part of that relationship.”

Aged eight, both sets of parents conspired to purchase the two friends guitars and lessons for Christmas (“Kind of like
an arranged wedding, but an arranged career…” Ian jokes). And from there, first messing around in school bands as
teenagers before splintering off as the only two that really wanted to take a music career seriously (if you were
wondering why cleopatrick are a bass player-less duo, it’s because Cobourg literally had no other prospects) began
the seeds that would lead the pair to the present day.

However if a childhood spent mutually nerding out to the opening note of AC/DC’s ‘Back In Black’, replaying its
sledgehammer introduction over and over again (“It gave me butterflies every time,” the singer nods) sounds like a
potentially ill-fitting mindset in a town like theirs, then it’s exactly this separation that cleopatrick embrace as being
their secret weapon. “Just being where we’re from, and being pretty chilled guys, I think we never think about the
world in the right way until something clicks for us. Even booking shows: I’d call venues asking if they would book us
and it would just be the bartender talking to me like, ‘I just work here…’. I recently went back through our email and
saw a bunch of those messages we’d sent to random sports bars asking to play and none of them have replies,” Luke
recalls. “But that innocence has been our lucky key and the way we’ve been able to grow this band and keep it cool
doing our own thing; we’re already outside the circle so we naturally just think that way and it’s something we’ve
become really grateful for.”

Growing older and growing into their music tastes, Luke and Ian’s blossoming love of hip hop (the pair cite Drake and
Kendrick Lamar as particular obsessions) began to quickly seep into their songwriting. Cemented in their abilities as a
duo (“I don’t know how we could find a third member it worked as well with, even if we tried”), it became as integral an
element within the sonic mix as the bands they’d first fallen in love with. And so, with the MO of making rock music
that hit as strongly as the hip hop tracks they loved, but spoke honestly about the things they knew, the spiralling
success of ‘hometown’ soon started an increasing wave of opportunities. They toured Canada for the first time,

played their first real headline tour and found themselves adorning the cover of Spotify’s ‘Rock This’ playlist. “I was
working at a coffee shop and Ian was working at a hardware store and we’d be getting emails from the Head of Rock
at Spotify asking when the next song was out,” Luke recalls. “It was like Hannah Montana, it was like we were living
two different lives,” Ian nods.

Since then, they’ve been “drip-feeding” new material, purposefully taking it at their own pace and doing it their own
way; EP ‘the boys’ landed in 2018, while the last couple of years have seen a slow tease of interim singles. And
between multiple sold out tours in Canada, the US and the UK/EU, appearances at Lollapalooza, Austin City Limits
and Reading/Leeds, a recent Amazon Ones to Watch 2021 tip and inclusion on Apple Music playlists, the pair have
been crafting BUMMER: a debut album that sees cleopatrick harness all the magic they’ve been brewing over their
two-decade friendship and funnel it into a record that aims to reinvigorate the rock landscape from the ground up.
Taking the ethos of their New Rock Mafia collective - a group of friends and fellow bands, united in making a more
inclusive, equality-driven space in rock music - and imbuing it with the sonic ambition and ferocity of a record
designed to be played hard and loud, BUMMER is an album made to mean something.

“We want our music to feel as big as hip hop does in the club - big subs and loud drums and vocals right up front. But
lyrically, we want to sing songs that everyone in the crowd feels comfortable singing along to. There’s a [historical]
formula to rock music where people sing about drugs and alcohol and sex and it’s so fucking phony; it makes us so
angry that kids who want to hear guitar music and get something from it and have a favourite band have to settle for
that, and listen to these dudes lying to them,” Luke asserts. “It’s so gross to me and completely the opposite of how
this genre started.”

Recorded with 21-year-old NRM peer and producer Jig Dubé putting their supportive, community-driven money
where their mouths are, cleopatrick’s debut is a time capsule of a record - nodding to their insular, small town
beginnings (second single ‘THE DRAKE’’ was written in reference to a traumatic gig in which their high school bullies
turned up and started punching people in the mosh pit) but reaching for something altogether more exciting, utopian
and full of life.

And at its heart, it’s an album about two friends, who’ve been with each other since the formative first steps that
adorn ‘BUMMER’’s heartwarming cover images (two pictures taken by the pair’s kindergarten teacher from when
Luke and Ian accidentally showed up to school in matching sweaters) and made something that’s a testament to the
power of sticking to your guns.

“To look back and reflect on the people we were at the start of all this when it was a pipedream and still feel like the
same people, that feels cool. Although there’s a lot that’s changed, it still feels like the same vision,” Ian smiles.
“We’ve been comparing the album to the Voyager One probe - it has everything about us in it and we don’t know if
people will get it or if people will care, but it feels so good to have it out there,” Luke nods. “It feels like a small way to
live forever.”

Please correct the information below.

Select ticket quantity.

Select Tickets

Ages 14+
limit 10 per person
General Admission
Please note £1.50 venue levy included in the fees
£20.48 (£16.50 + £3.98 Fees, excluding any delivery costs)

Delivery Method

eTickets

Terms & Conditions

This event is 14 and over. Any ticket holder unable to present valid identification indicating that they are at least 14 years of age will not be admitted to this event, and will not be eligible for a refund. Cost includes handling fee of £2 (eTickets are not always sent or available to print immediately).


eTickets will be sent separately to your order confirmation email, and will arrive up to 3 days before the show.