Pool Kids Share Candid New Single “Leona Street”
Today, indie-rock quartet Pool Kids share their new single titled “Leona Street”, an urgent blend of quirky riffs paired with brutally self-aware lyrics and an anthemic power-pop hook. Taken from their upcoming record ‘Easier Said Than Done’ out on August 15th via Epitaph, the Mike Vernon Davis (Foxing, Ratboys) produced album sets its gaze on the way relationships smolder and erupt over time.
On “Leona Street,” vocalist Christine Goodwyne spills her inner monologue, sparked by walking past the house of an old friend she had previously fallen out with. “This was a person who really knew me, and was familiar with my futile cycles of trying to get better,” she says. “I was thinking about how they would laugh if they saw me outside on a run, once again going through the motions of trying to get it together. It forced me to confront that I am still the flawed person this old friend would remember, the kind of person that let the friendship die in the first place.” Co-directed and edited by Goodwyne, the whimsical music video is full of personality, capturing the playful chemistry between the group of friends. Check it out below:
“Leona Street”
Powerful collectivity rings through Pool Kids' third album Easier Said Than Done -- in the dynamic interplay between Goodwyne and Andy Anaya's guitars, in Nicolette Alvarez's gravitationally binding basslines, in Caden Clinton's nimble, whirling drum patterns. They lock together into a unified force, each leaning on the other, propelling themselves forward into hard-won release. With its irrepressible communal energy, Easier Said Than Done impresses one of the most important reminders anyone can hear: You don’t have to do anything in this world alone.
Pool Kids returned to Seattle to work with Mike Vernon Davis (Foxing, Great Grandpa), who produced their self-titled. The band funded the studio sessions with money they’d saved from years of steady touring, eager to explore the freedom that comes with making a record independently. They spent five weeks together in the summer of 2024, staying with friends, at motels, and in the studio itself to save money. They recorded late into the night, driving to the edge of the city to shower at a Planet Fitness once they'd wrapped for the day.
Working from the trust they'd built during their earlier studio sessions, the band focused on pushing the record to its fullest emotive potential with Davis encouraging them to experiment with new recording strategies. Songs evolved through multiple iterations, assuming different genres as they went, from synth pop to slacker rock and back again, or from gentle acoustic balladry to driving anthemic rock. "We tried out new ideas on the fly, wrote and reworked songs, keys, chord progressions, and runs together," says Alvarez. "We looked at everything as a collective through an even more powerful microscope than before." Piece by piece and day by day, the record started to take shape. "We dove into these rabbit holes trying to figure out the right sound for each note," says Anaya. "It was a deeply exploratory process once we hit record."
While writing, Goodwyne challenged herself to focus on the present moment and only use lyrics she had recently penned, rather than looking back through old notes for starting points. "There’s a lot of Florida imagery and a lot of really specific glimpses from tour on this album," she says. "By letting myself get specific, I feel a lot more emotionally connected to the songs. It's a very personal record for me and for the whole band, too. I was writing about what life has been like for all of us over the last few years. I feel like all of us can relate to a lot of the songs."
Originally recorded in a friend’s kitchen, their debut album, 2018's Music to Practice Safe Sex To earned a fan in Paramore's Hayley Williams. Pool Kids' 2022 self-titled record netted wide critical acclaim with its lush, high-contrast mixture of pop, emo, and math rock. Over the past few years they've shared stages with The Mountain Goats, PUP, Beach Bunny, and La Dispute. Throughout their rapid artistic growth, they've held fast to the principles of their DIY origins and have earned over 23 Million global streams across their catalog. At their shows, they hammer home the message that anyone can do what Pool Kids do. Anyone can start a band. Anyone can make a record. Everyone deserves to chase their dream.