Celebrating 20 years of David Bazan’s Headphones!

Out now on Suicide Squeeze, the self-titled album gets remastered with two bonus tracks, expanded artwork, and new liner notes written by David Dark.

Fans can catch him live on a number of upcoming performances:

June 21 : Seattle WA / Barboza # celebrating the music of Headphones

July 12 : Seattle WA / Barboza #

August 16 : Seattle WA / Barboza #

September 11 : San Diego CA / The Observatory %

September 12 : Los Angeles CA / The Fonda Theatre %

September 13 : Pomona CA / The Glass House %

September 14 : Pioneertown CA / Pappy and Harriet’s %

September 16 : San Francisco CA / The Regency Ballroom %

September 20 : Portland OR / Revolution Hall %

September 21 : Portland OR / Revolution Hall %

October 10-12 : Las Vegas NV / Best Friend Forever Festival

# 30th Anniversary Show

% with Grandaddy

“…a deft representation of the current political climate’s many terrifying paradoxes.” – Pitchfork

“It may have been to Bazan’s benefit to veer a bit further away from his usual format, taking a vacation more complete than just holding himself to a palette restriction he’s never shied away from in the past, but an album full of synth-sugar does make the bitter pills easier to swallow.” – Paste Magazine

In 2005, Headphones arrived as a seismic shift in David Bazan’s already formidable canon—a collection of synth-driven confessions that push the boundaries of narrative songwriting. Stripped down to its barest essentials, the album finds Bazan and collaborators Tim Walsh and Frank Lenz constructing an audaciously raw soundscape: no guitars, just synthesizers, live drums, and Bazan’s unmistakable vocals. Twenty years later, it remains a masterwork of emotional excavation and geopolitical reckoning, as relevant today as the day it was released.

This 20th Anniversary edition, remastered by Christopher Colbert at National Freedom (The Walkmen, Richard Swift, Pedro the Lion), is housed in a gatefold jacket with expanded artwork by Grammy-nominated designer Jesse LeDoux, plus liner notes by writer and Belmont University Associate Professor David Dark. The self-titled album threads a delicate needle, simultaneously personal and prophetic. Songs like “Major Cities” tackle the macrocosm of American imperialism with clarity and anger, while tracks like “I Never Wanted You” unearth the raw wounds of interpersonal defeat. These are stories of inner and outer collapse, of bullies (both personal and political) wreaking havoc, yet rendered with humanity. Even in its darkest moments, though, Headphones pulses with the hope that honesty might light a way forward—if only we’ll bear witness to the truth.

On its twentieth anniversary, Headphones feels more vital than ever. For those who’ve lived with it since 2005, this reissue is a chance to revisit an old wound, to press on it and see what’s healed and what still aches. For new listeners, it’s a chance to sit with something audacious and true—an album that invites us to reckon with the ways we fail each other—and the ways we might still be good. Twenty years on, Headphones remains a rare album that doesn’t just speak to you, but asks you to listen harder.