The Coathangers announce new 2 song demos 7″ featuring “Hurry” and “Drifter” out October 31st

Listen to A-Side “Hurry (Demo)” out now

Unearthed from the margins of the band’s 2016 album Nosebleed Weekend,
these two tracks offer a raw, revealing glimpse into The Coathangers’ creative process,
capturing a band mid-stride, sorting through instinct and intention.

The Coathangers Album Art

“Hurry” and “Drifter” were both written and demoed during the sessions for their 2016 album, Nosebleed Weekend but ultimately shelved, left to simmer in the archives. Years later, vocalist Julia Kugel returned to them with fresh ears and found something vital: a looseness, a spark.

“Hurry” began as an instrument-swap experiment—Julia on drums, Stephanie on guitar—with a beat-up charm and feral momentum. Its rhythm section is propulsive, the guitars overdriven and wiry, the vocals echoing with a kind of private urgency. It doesn’t polish itself up, and that’s the point, it feels like a band finding something new in the act of not overthinking.

The Coathangers member, Julia Kugel (aka Crook Kid) explains, “The recordings are raw- but that’s kind of what I like about them. They are songs created within the tension of making an album —midst actualization. There is an excitement and energy that is fresh and experimental in some ways. I was very glad when Suicide Squeeze agreed to put them out on a 7” because it gives an insight into The Coathangers’ writing process. It feels like a bit of time travel.”

“Drifter,” meanwhile, features an early version of a song that later appeared on the Parasite EP, this time with a lighter step—the distortion dialed back just enough to let the vocal melody lean forward, more assured. It feels like a bit of time travel to the band’s rawest instincts.

There’s an immediacy to both tracks, sketches made during the chaos of album-making, alive with experimentation and risk. Pressed to 7” by Suicide Squeeze, the tracks are less about perfection and more about process: evidence of the Coathangers’ ability to trust their guts, and let things breathe.