Ty Segall
Ty Garrett Segall (born June 8, 1987) is an American multi-instrumentalist, singer-songwriter, and record producer best known for his prolific career in garage rock, psychedelic rock, and indie music.[1][2] He has released over seventeen solo studio albums since his debut in 2008, alongside numerous collaborations, side projects, and band efforts that have shaped the modern lo-fi and revivalist rock scenes.[3] Segall's work draws from influences including David Bowie, Marc Bolan, Black Sabbath, the Stooges, and the Beatles, blending raw energy, sophisticated guitar work, distortion, and non-traditional song structures.[4][5] Born in Laguna Beach, California, Segall was adopted by a lawyer father and an artist mother, growing up in a creative environment that fostered his early interest in music and art.[6] He attended the University of San Francisco, where he earned a degree in media studies and began performing in bands, initially as a drummer in an ESG-inspired dance-punk group before transitioning to guitar and vocals.[6] His professional breakthrough came in 2005 as the lead singer and guitarist of the Orange County garage-punk band the Epsilons, with whom he released two albums before the group disbanded when he was 19.[2][7] Following this, Segall formed the garage-punk trio Traditional Fools and began experimenting as a one-man band, using a kick drum and guitar after a show cancellation, which laid the groundwork for his solo lo-fi style.[8][6] Segall's solo career took off with his self-titled debut album in 2008 on Castle Face Records, followed by Lemons (2009) and Melted (2010) on Goner Records, establishing his reputation for raw, experimental garage rock.[3] Signing with Drag City in 2011, he produced critically acclaimed works such as Goodbye Bread (2011), Twins (2012), Manipulator (2014), Freedom's Goblin (2018), and First Taste (2019), often incorporating acoustic elements, psychedelia, and themes of loss and introspection.[3][9][10] His collaborative projects include albums with White Fence (e.g., Hair in 2012 and Joy in 2018), Mikal Cronin (Reverse Shark Attack, 2009), and his heavy rock band Fuzz, where he plays drums.[11][3] In recent years, Segall has maintained his output with albums like Three Bells (2024), Love Rudiments (2024), and Possession (2025), while performing high-profile sessions such as NPR's Tiny Desk Concert in August 2025.[3][12][13] Married to musician Denée Segall, he has co-written songs with her and often references personal elements, including their dog Herman, in his lyrics.[5] Despite his reputation for rapid releases—nearly 20 years into his career—he has expressed intentions to slow his pace slightly while continuing to explore loud, innovative sounds.[5]Early life and background
Childhood and family
Ty Segall was born Ty Garrett Segall on June 8, 1987, in Laguna Beach, California.[14] He was adopted shortly after birth by a local family, with his adoptive father working as a lawyer and his adoptive mother as an artist.[6] Segall's biological father, a former drummer who as of 2012 was a real estate agent in Northern California, maintains a close relationship with him, which Segall has described as "great."[15] Segall spent his early childhood in the affluent seaside community of Laguna Beach, Orange County, an environment shaped by its artistic heritage, hippie undertones, and vibrant surfer culture.[16] The town's idyllic beaches and creative atmosphere fostered a relaxed yet insular upbringing, where he frequently surfed and skateboarded as daily activities.[17] This coastal setting, once a haven for artists and free spirits, later faced changes from media portrayals like MTV's Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County, which Segall noted disrupted its original vibe.[6] His initial musical exposures stemmed from family dynamics and television. His adoptive father introduced him to 1950s and 1960s rock and soul classics via local radio, while his mother embraced hair metal acts such as Guns N' Roses.[18] MTV played a pivotal role as well, serving as his primary "babysitter" and immersing him in punk and rock videos during the late 1980s and 1990s.[19]Education and early music
Segall graduated from Laguna Beach High School in 2005, where he received the Joey Petrovich Songwriter Scholarship.[20] During his high school years, he began exploring music actively, starting with drums at age 13 and picking up the guitar at 15.[21] These early experiences were shaped by the punk and garage rock scenes, which fueled his self-driven approach to instrumentation and songwriting.[6] In high school, Segall formed his initial band experiences, collaborating with future long-term partners such as Charles Moothart, who joined one of his groups during that period.[20] These ensembles allowed him to experiment with performance and composition, blending raw energy from punk influences with garage rock's lo-fi ethos, often playing locally and honing skills through informal jams.[6] The songwriter scholarship recognized his emerging talent, providing early validation for his creative pursuits amid these formative group efforts.[20] Following graduation, Segall relocated to San Francisco at age 18 to attend the University of San Francisco, where he earned a degree in media studies in 2009.[22][23][24] During his college years, he continued informal music involvement, transitioning from drumming in a dance-punk outfit to singing and guitar in garage-oriented projects, which deepened his immersion in the Bay Area's vibrant underground scene.[6] This period bridged his high school experimentation with broader opportunities, as he balanced studies with persistent songwriting and band activities before fully committing to music post-graduation.[23]Recording career
Early career (2008–2011)
Segall began his professional music career in the mid-2000s as the frontman of the garage punk band the Epsilons, which he formed in high school in Laguna Beach, California, around age 17 in 2004 or 2005.[25] The group, featuring high school friend Mikal Cronin on bass, released a self-titled EP in 2005 and drew from raw, scuzzy influences like early punk and garage rock, but disbanded after about two and a half years as members pursued other projects following Segall's move to San Francisco for college.[21] During this transitional period, Segall briefly played in short-lived outfits like Party Fowl and contributed to the local Orange County scene before focusing on solo work. In late 2008, Segall released his self-titled debut solo album on Castle Face Records, the label founded by Thee Oh Sees' John Dwyer, whom Segall had befriended after relocating to San Francisco.[26] Recorded in a lo-fi style with distorted guitars and tape hiss, the album featured 14 short, aggressive tracks like "The Drag" and "Party Fowl," capturing Segall's raw energy and marking his entry into the Bay Area's burgeoning garage rock underground.[27] The release, limited to 500 copies initially, showcased his one-man-band approach, handling guitar, drums, and vocals, and helped establish his reputation among DIY enthusiasts. Building on this momentum, Segall issued Lemons in July 2009 via Goner Records, a 12-track collection of fuzzy, 1960s-inspired garage rock that refined his lo-fi aesthetic while introducing more melodic hooks.[28] Standout tracks such as "Standing at the Station" and "Cents" highlighted his knack for catchy riffs amid chaotic production, earning praise for its confident evolution from the debut; Pitchfork described it as a "ridiculously catchy" sophomore effort that solidified his experimental edge.[29] The album's reception contributed to growing buzz in the indie circuit, with its atmospheric psych elements bridging punk aggression and psychedelic vibes. Segall's third album, Melted, arrived in June 2010, still on Goner Records, and represented a peak in his early raw sound with 10 blistering songs clocking in under 30 minutes.[30] Key tracks like "Girlfriend," with its driving riff, and "Imaginary Person," a fuzzy psych-pop standout, exemplified his ability to blend immediacy with invention, drawing comparisons to classic garage revival acts. Critics lauded its intensity, with Pitchfork calling it Segall's strongest statement yet, noting how the brevity amplified its visceral impact and helped cement his cult status.[30] By 2011, Segall signed to Drag City for Goodbye Bread, a more polished and introspective turn featuring acoustic elements and cleaner production across 10 songs that showcased his songwriting growth.[31] Released in June, it included highlights like the title track's hazy croon and "My Head Explodes," where collaborator Mikal Cronin contributed saxophone, reflecting their longstanding partnership that dated back to the Epsilons and included the 2009 split 12" Reverse Shark Attack.[32] Pitchfork commended the album's restraint, observing how Segall slowed his pace without losing edge, allowing melodic depth to emerge.[9] Throughout 2008–2011, Segall immersed himself in San Francisco's garage rock revival, a scene revitalized by labels like Castle Face and acts including Thee Oh Sees and the Fresh & Onlys, where he frequently gigged at venues like the Rickshaw Stop and Bottom of the Hill.[33] His early live shows, often as a one-man band with looped drums and frenzied guitar, built a dedicated following through word-of-mouth in the DIY community, blending high-energy covers and originals to foster an underground buzz that positioned him as a key figure in the Bay Area's noisy rock renaissance.[34]Hair, Slaughterhouse and Twins (2012)
In 2012, Ty Segall released Hair on April 24 through Drag City, marking a collaborative effort with White Fence's Tim Presley, where Segall handled drums and rhythm guitar while Presley took lead guitar and vocals. The album channels the raw, propulsive energy of 1960s garage rock and psychedelia, with tracks like "Time" and "Easy Ryder" delivering manic, riff-driven intensity that evokes unbridled youthful abandon and rebellion against convention.[35][36][37] Later that year, on June 26, Segall issued Slaughterhouse via In the Red Records as the debut from the Ty Segall Band, featuring Mikal Cronin on bass and vocals, Charlie Moothart on guitar, and Emily Rose Epstein on drums. Recorded in collective sessions that amplified the group's chemistry, the album embodies Segall's garage punk ethos through heavy, distortion-laden tracks like "Death" and "I Bought My Eyes," prioritizing visceral, high-octane performances over polished production.[38][39] Segall capped his prolific 2012 with the solo release Twins on Drag City in September, a 19-track collection spanning garage rock urgency and psychedelic introspection, clocking in at under 40 minutes. Standout "The Hill" exemplifies its bleary, atmospheric psych elements, while the album's overall diversity—from snotty hooks in "Thank God for Sinners" to melodic introspection in "Would You Be My Love"—earned praise for showcasing Segall's restless songwriting range.[40][41] This trio of releases highlighted Segall's shift to Drag City for Hair and Twins, aligning him with a label supportive of his experimental leanings, while his output drew escalating media spotlight, including features that underscored his emergence as a garage rock force.[6]Fuzz, Sleeper and Manipulator (2013–2015)
In 2013, Ty Segall formed the heavy rock trio Fuzz as a side project, enlisting frequent collaborator Charles Moothart on guitar and vocals alongside bassist Roland Cosio.[42][43][44] The band's self-titled debut album, released on October 1 via In the Red Records, emphasized thunderous riffs and raw energy, with Moothart's guitar work driving tracks like "This Time I Got a Reason" and showcasing Segall's drumming and vocals in a departure from his solo output.[45][44] Later that year, Segall released Sleeper on August 20 through Drag City, positioning it as a more subdued counterpart to his 2012 album Twins by highlighting his reflective, acoustic side.[46][47] The record features introspective psychedelic folk arrangements across ten tracks, including the haunting "The Keepers," which explores themes of self-examination and escapism through sparse instrumentation and Segall's vulnerable delivery.[48][47] Building on this experimental phase, Segall's 2014 solo album Manipulator, issued August 26 on Drag City, marked a return to fuller band production while incorporating psychedelic rock elements and orchestral touches like strings on songs such as the title track and "The Clock."[49][50] Spanning 17 tracks, the album blends glam influences with Segall's signature fuzz tones, highlighted by standout cuts like "The Singer" and "Tall Man Skinny Lady," which fuse melodic hooks with layered psychedelia.[51][50] During this period, Segall balanced touring commitments between his solo work and Fuzz, including Fuzz's North American and international dates from August to November 2013, culminating in a performance at Austin's Fun Fun Fun Fest.[52][53] In 2014, he supported Manipulator with an extensive solo tour featuring his backing band, hitting festivals like FYF Fest in Los Angeles where new material debuted energetically, alongside TV appearances on Conan and residencies at venues like the Echo.[54][55] A live recording from his 2013 Pickathon Festival set, capturing solo-era performances, was later issued in 2015 as part of a split release.[56]Emotional Mugger and The Muggers (2016)
In January 2016, Ty Segall released his eighth studio album, Emotional Mugger, through Drag City Records.[57] The record, announced via VHS tapes mailed to journalists featuring glitchy visuals and explanatory content, delves into themes of emotional turmoil, addiction, and interpersonal discomfort through raw, distorted soundscapes.[57] Abrasive tracks like the punk-infused opener "Squealer" and the chaotic title track exemplify its confrontational style, blending heavy fuzz guitars with dissonant structures to evoke a sense of unease and compulsion.[58] To promote Emotional Mugger, Segall assembled The Muggers, a short-lived supergroup serving as his backing band and emphasizing chaotic live energy.[59] The lineup included Mikal Cronin on saxophone, Kyle Thomas (of King Tuff) on guitar, Cory Hanson and Evan Burrows (from Wand) on guitar and drums respectively, and Emmett Kelly (of the Cairo Gang) on guitar, creating a collective of psych and garage rock collaborators.[60] Performances often featured theatrical elements like face paint and improvised dissonance, amplifying the album's intensity in high-energy sets that prioritized raw improvisation over polished execution.[61] Critics hailed Emotional Mugger as a return to Segall's garage rock roots following more psychedelic explorations, infusing experimental edges with street-punk aggression.[62] Pitchfork awarded it a 7.8 out of 10, praising its portrayal of addictive cycles that leave listeners unsettled yet drawn back.[58] Rolling Stone described it as a sleazier evolution of prior work, with low-end sludge evoking Royal Trux influences.[62] The Guardian noted its hyperactive, dissonant "bad trip" quality, though standout melodies in tracks like "Candy Sam 80" provided moments of tuneful relief.[63] The album spawned promotional videos for "Squealer" and "Emotional Mugger," highlighting its visceral aesthetics.[64] The Muggers supported it with a brief North American tour in early 2016, including headline shows at venues like Webster Hall in New York and the 9:30 Club in Washington, D.C., alongside festival appearances such as Sasquatch! Music Festival.[57]Ty Segall, Freedom's Goblin, First Taste and The Freedom Band (2017–2019)
In 2017, Ty Segall released his ninth studio album, simply titled Ty Segall, on January 27 via Drag City Records.[65] The record, which spans 10 tracks including singles "Break a Guitar" and "Orange Color Queen," draws on garage rock and psychedelic influences, featuring raw guitar riffs and introspective lyrics exploring themes of freedom and personal struggle.[65] It was recorded primarily at The Albert, Segall's home studio in Los Angeles, with additional sessions at Electrical Audio in Chicago, emphasizing a lo-fi, energetic production that highlighted his evolving songwriting.[66] This album introduced Segall's backing group, the Freedom Band, comprising Mikal Cronin on bass and backing vocals, Charles Moothart on drums, Emmett Kelly on guitar and vocals, and Ben Boye on keyboards and percussion.[67] The ensemble's formation allowed Segall to expand his live performances, blending improvisational jams with structured rock arrangements during tours that year.[68] The Freedom Band's debut as a credited unit came with Freedom's Goblin, a sprawling double album released on January 26, 2018, also through Drag City.[69] Clocking in at 19 tracks and over 75 minutes, the album incorporates glam rock, psychedelic experimentation, and garage punk, with standout songs like "Every 1's a Winner" (a Hot Chocolate cover) and "Meaning" showcasing Segall's playful yet politically charged songcraft.[70] Recorded across five studios in three cities—including The Albert, Electrical Audio, and Studio B in Los Angeles—the project was produced by Segall alongside collaborators like Steve Albini, emphasizing a diverse sonic palette that ranged from extended jams to concise pop hooks.[71] Critics noted its thematic focus on societal "goblins" like conformity and power dynamics, delivered through Segall's signature distorted guitars and the band's tight interplay.[70] The Freedom Band supported the release with extensive North American and European tours, performing material from both Ty Segall and Freedom's Goblin in high-energy sets that often extended tracks into free-form explorations.[72] By 2019, the Freedom Band had solidified as Segall's primary live and recording outfit, with additions like vocalist Shannon Lay enhancing their dynamic.[73] This lineup contributed to First Taste, Segall's 11th studio album, released on August 2 via Drag City.[74] The record marked a shift toward instrumental diversity, with Segall playing drums, saxophone, and theremin alongside guitar, while the band incorporated piano, violin, and percussion for a more experimental, folk-infused psychedelic sound on tracks like "Taste" and "Ice Plant."[74] Recorded at The Albert with mixing by Matthew Littlejohn, First Taste explores introspective themes of memory and nature, receiving praise for its restraint compared to Segall's earlier high-octane releases.[75] That year, the Freedom Band also issued the live album Deforming Lobes in March, capturing performances from three nights at Los Angeles' Teragram Ballroom in December 2018 and recorded by Steve Albini; it reinterprets older tracks like "Love Fuzz" in a warped, improvisational style reflective of their evolving stage chemistry.[67] The period from 2017 to 2019 saw the Freedom Band tour rigorously, including festival appearances and KEXP sessions, establishing them as a versatile unit that amplified Segall's prolific output.[76]Harmonizer and "Hello, Hi" (2020–2022)
In 2020, amid the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, Ty Segall began recording Harmonizer at his newly established home studio, Harmonizer Studios, in Topanga Canyon, California. The album's production was shaped by lockdown restrictions, which limited in-person collaborations and led Segall to work solo or with just one or two band members at a time, resulting in a more introspective process compared to his prior ensemble-driven efforts with the Freedom Band. Released digitally on August 3, 2021, via Drag City Records—with physical formats following on October 29—Harmonizer emphasizes synth-heavy arrangements, blending fuzzy guitars with electronic keyboards to create a sleek, mechanical groove that evokes the isolation of the era.[77][78][79] Recorded concurrently with Harmonizer over two months in the fall of 2020, Hello, Hi further highlights Segall's pandemic-era shift toward home-based, solitary creation, serving as an initial test for his new studio setup. Issued on July 22, 2022, by Drag City, the album adopts a lo-fi, predominantly acoustic aesthetic with rustic instrumentation, including fingerpicked guitars and subtle electric accents, fostering an intimate atmosphere centered on domestic life and personal reflection. Denée Segall, Ty's wife, contributed photography and artwork, adding a layer of familial collaboration to the project's visual identity, while tracks like "Hello, Hi" and "Don't Lie" convey quiet, everyday tenderness amid confinement.[80][81][82] Segall also composed the instrumental soundtrack for the 2020 documentary Whirlybird, directed by Matt Yoka, which chronicles the exploits of Los Angeles News Service helicopter pilots. Released digitally on February 22, 2022, via Drag City—with vinyl arriving in May—the score features a mix of synth pulses, electric keyboards, and percussive elements, diverging from Segall's rock roots to suit the film's tense, aerial narrative without vocals or traditional songs.[83][84] The pandemic disrupted Segall's live activities, prompting virtual performances such as a sans-audience session for Zebulon on June 25, 2020, streamed online to connect with fans during isolation. Tours were repeatedly delayed or canceled, including a planned December 2021 residency at San Francisco's Great American Music Hall, due to rising COVID-19 cases, but Segall resumed in-person shows in 2022 with announcements for North American dates supporting Harmonizer and acoustic sets tied to Hello, Hi.[85][86][87]Three Bells, Love Rudiments and Possession (2023–2025)
In early 2024, Ty Segall released Three Bells, his fifteenth solo studio album, on January 26 via Drag City Records. The double album, comprising 15 tracks spanning over 65 minutes, explores themes of introspection and personal reflection, framed as a "journey to the center of the self" that addresses malaise through parabolic storytelling.[88][89] Segall incorporates layered psych-rock arrangements, including string sections that add emotional depth to tracks like "Reflections" and "Move," blending acoustic foundations from his prior work with amplified, prog-influenced elements.[90] Critics praised its ambitious and unpredictable structure, noting how it captures maturity in Segall's songwriting while maintaining his signature garage-rock energy.[10] Later that year, on August 30, Segall issued Love Rudiments, an instrumental album exclusively focused on percussion and rhythm, released via Drag City and available on Bandcamp. This 10-track collection serves as a meditation on his foundational love for drumming, featuring avant-garde compositions that emphasize percussive patterns and textural experimentation without vocals or traditional melodies.[91][92] Tracks like "First Look / First Conversation / Walk Home Pt. I" and "The Dance" evoke passionate, throes-of-motion intensity through layered beats and found sounds, marking a departure from his rock-centric output.[93] Reception highlighted its innovative restraint, underscoring Segall's versatility in stripping down to core rhythmic elements.[94] Segall's sixteenth solo album, Possession, arrived on May 30, 2025, also through Drag City, infusing psychedelic rock with glam and orchestral flourishes across 10 songs. Standout tracks such as "Shoplifter," with its Beatles-esque mod bounce, and "Fantastic Tomb," channeling T. Rex-style swagger, exemplify the album's freewheeling energy and thematic focus on harnessing personal power and maturity.[95][96] The record balances jangly riffs with accessible hooks, including horn sections on "Skirts of Heaven" and falsetto-driven choruses in the title track, signaling a refined evolution in Segall's sound.[97] To support Possession, Segall announced a fall 2025 North American tour, commencing in October with full-band performances that revived his high-energy live presence post-pandemic, including stops at venues like the Crest Theatre in Sacramento.[98][99] Throughout this period, Segall's output drew acclaim for his unrelenting prolificacy, with reviewers across outlets like Pitchfork, Paste, and PopMatters commending the thematic depth and stylistic range from Three Bells to Possession as evidence of his enduring creative vitality.[10][90][97]Musical style and influences
Core characteristics
Ty Segall's music is predominantly rooted in garage rock, psychedelic rock, and lo-fi punk, drawing heavily from the raw energy of proto-punk acts like Black Sabbath and The Stooges.[4][100] These genres manifest in his propulsive, riff-driven songs that blend gritty distortion with hypnotic, mind-bending structures, as heard in early tracks like the corrosive jangle of "Die Tonight" from Lemons.[4] His signature production style emphasizes DIY aesthetics, characterized by heavy guitar riffs, raw and wailing vocals, and pervasive distortion that creates a fuzzy, abrasive wall of sound.[101][100] This lo-fi approach often layers fuzzed-out guitars and thunderous rhythms to evoke a sense of unfiltered immediacy, prioritizing visceral impact over polished clarity.[4] Thematically, Segall's work consistently explores youth, rebellion, emotional vulnerability, and surrealism, weaving personal introspection with chaotic, liberating narratives that reflect inner turmoil and defiant spirit.[4][100] Songs often delve into surreal imagery and raw confessions, capturing the angst of maturation and societal pushback, as in the reflective loss evoked by Sleeper.[4] As a versatile multi-instrumentalist, Segall proficiently handles guitar, drums, and bass, frequently performing as a one-man band to craft dense, self-contained arrangements that underscore his hands-on, experimental ethos.[4][100] This proficiency allows him to shift seamlessly between blistering leads and rhythmic foundations, enhancing the organic, live-wire feel of his recordings.[102]Evolution and influences
Segall's musical style began in the late 2000s with a raw, lo-fi garage rock approach rooted in punk influences discovered through MTV exposure, including the Ramones and Nirvana, which shaped his early blues-punk energy and high-velocity riffs.[103][104] His debut album in 2008 exemplified this phase, featuring exploratory, one-man-band recordings that echoed the Stooges' serrated hooks and garage urgency.[4] By 2010–2012, this evolved into heavier grunge-tinged garage-punk, as heard in works like Melted and Twins, where he incorporated glam elements and guest collaborators, drawing from contemporaries in the West Coast neo-garage scene such as Thee Oh Sees, with whom he shared influences like Billy Childish's raw ethos.[4][105] From 2013 to 2019, Segall's sound expanded into psychedelic jams and eclectic rock, blending classic influences like the Beatles, David Bowie, Black Sabbath, and Marc Bolan into more orchestrated and genre-fluid compositions.[4] Albums such as Manipulator (2014) showcased Bowie-esque psychedelia and Beatles-inspired melodies, while Freedom's Goblin (2018) mixed hardcore, folk, and disco, reflecting a maturation toward broader experimentation without losing his rock core.[51] This period marked a shift from solo-driven rawness to band-oriented jams, influenced by Big Star and George Harrison's melodic introspection.[4] Life events profoundly shaped Segall's evolution starting in 2020, with the pandemic and family life prompting a turn toward synth-driven home experiments and introspective themes. Relocating to Topanga Canyon in 2019 with his wife Denée and their dogs, the isolation of 2020 led to acoustic, solitary songwriting on Hello, Hi (2022), emphasizing unpolished vocals akin to Bob Dylan and Neil Young.[80] This contrasted with the electric synth-rock of Harmonizer (2021), built in his pandemic-era home studio, signaling a balance between personal vulnerability and energetic release. By 2023–2025, his work grew more mature and experimental, incorporating John Lennon's raw emotionality in Three Bells (2024), where Denée's presence as a muse added cosmic-jazz and folk-prog layers.[10] Love Rudiments (2024) ventured into instrumental percussion and avant-garde jazz, exploring vibraphone and timpani for a non-vocal, rhythmic focus, while Possession (2025) embraced pop tendencies through piano lessons and producer Glyn Johns' classic rock techniques, yielding polished riffs with mature, narrative-driven themes.[94][106] These shifts highlight Segall's progression from punk-fueled aggression to a reflective, multifaceted artistry influenced by family intimacy and global disruptions.[107]Business and production work
GOD? Records
GOD? Records is a record label imprint founded by Ty Segall in 2014 as a subsidiary of Drag City, dedicated to releasing garage rock and experimental music from Segall and associated artists.[108] The imprint emerged as a platform for Segall to support emerging talent in the indie scene, beginning with early releases such as singles from David Novick, White Fence, and Jack Name.[108] Among its inaugural full-length albums was Wand's debut Ganglion Reef in 2014, which Segall signed to the label after discovering the band's raw, psych-infused sound.[109] Subsequent offerings expanded the roster, including 7-inch singles from projects like Zath and Running, emphasizing short-run vinyl and cassette formats to capture spontaneous, lo-fi aesthetics.[108] Segall himself has utilized the imprint for select personal projects, notably the surprise cassette-only album Orange Rainbow in 2018, limited to just 55 hand-dubbed copies sold exclusively at a Los Angeles art reception.[110] This release exemplified the label's approach to intimate, event-tied distributions, bypassing traditional retail channels. In the 2020s, GOD? Records sustained its output with titles like Oog Bogo's EP 2 (featuring the track "Disappear") in 2020, which Segall mixed and mastered, blending psych-folk elements reminiscent of Syd Barrett and Kevin Ayers.[111] Other efforts include Flat Worms' "The Guest" 7-inch in 2021 and the full-length album Witness Marks in 2023, as well as the debut album by collaborative project Freckle (featuring Segall and Corey Madden) in 2025, highlighting the imprint's ongoing commitment to punk-adjacent experimentation.[112][113][114] By prioritizing limited editions and direct-to-fan sales via platforms like Bandcamp, GOD? Records has empowered artists with creative autonomy, often resulting in cult-favorite artifacts that bolster the underground garage and psych revival.[115] This model has amplified Segall's influence in the indie ecosystem, enabling tighter curation of his network's output while fostering a DIY ethos amid shifting music industry dynamics.[112]Production for other artists
Ty Segall has served as a producer for several artists within the garage rock and psychedelic scenes, often bringing a polished yet raw edge to their recordings. His production work emphasizes infusing high-energy garage elements with layered psychedelic textures, helping to elevate the sonic depth of collaborators' projects.[116] One of his earliest notable production credits came on Mikal Cronin's self-titled debut album, released in 2011 on Volar Records. Segall not only produced the record but also contributed drums and guitar, shaping its garage rock foundation with a balance of lo-fi grit and melodic clarity that highlighted Cronin's songwriting.[117] The album's production polished Cronin's raw demos into a cohesive debut, blending punk urgency with pop hooks. For Cronin's follow-up, MCII (Merge Records, 2013), Segall appeared as a guest musician on tracks like "Turn Around," adding guitar layers that enhanced the album's garage polish while Cronin handled primary production duties.[118] Segall's production extended to White Fence (Tim Presley) with the 2014 album For the Recently Found Innocent on Drag City. As producer, he transformed Presley's bedroom psych experiments into a fuller, band-like sound, incorporating live drums and expanded arrangements to amplify the project's enthralling, surreal qualities without losing its underground edge.[116][119] The collaboration built on their earlier joint efforts, such as the 2012 split Hair, where Segall's raw energy complemented Presley's psychedelic style.[120] More recently, Segall produced and engineered Flat Worms' album Witness Marks in 2023, released on GOD? Records, continuing his hands-on role in shaping the Bay Area's garage and psych sounds.[113] Through these and other efforts, Segall has played a mentorship role in the Bay Area music scene, guiding emerging acts toward recordings that capture authentic, energetic vibes while adding psychedelic depth. His approach often involves hands-on collaboration, drawing from his own prolific output to foster a sense of community among like-minded artists.[121]Discography
Solo studio albums
Ty Segall's solo studio albums represent his primary songwriting and recording output as a solo artist, spanning from raw garage rock beginnings to more experimental and polished productions. These works, released primarily through independent labels like Drag City and In the Red, often charted on Billboard's Heatseekers, Independent Albums, and occasionally the Billboard 200 charts, reflecting his cult following in the indie rock scene. His debut solo album, Ty Segall, was released in 2008 on Castle Face Records, marking his early lo-fi garage punk style with no major chart entries. Lemons followed in 2009 via In the Red Records, peaking at No. 28 on the Billboard Heatseekers Albums chart and establishing Segall's reputation for fuzzy, energetic riffs. Melted, issued in 2010 on Drag City, reached No. 10 on the Heatseekers Albums chart and introduced more psychedelic elements to his sound. Goodbye Bread (2011, Drag City) topped the Heatseekers chart at No. 1 and hit No. 29 on Independent Albums, shifting toward cleaner, melody-driven rock. Twins (2012, Drag City) also debuted at No. 1 on Heatseekers and No. 36 on Independent Albums, featuring dual-sided vinyl with contrasting styles. Sleeper (2013, Drag City) peaked at No. 1 on Heatseekers and No. 25 on Independent Albums, recorded as an acoustic project amid personal challenges. Manipulator (2014, Drag City) achieved No. 1 on Independent Albums and No. 165 on the Billboard 200, his first entry on the main albums chart, with polished production by Steve Albini. Emotional Mugger (2016, Drag City) reached No. 2 on Independent Albums and No. 104 on the Billboard 200, embracing weirder, synth-infused experimentation. The album was supported by touring as The Muggers. The self-titled Ty Segall (2017, Drag City) peaked at No. 3 on Independent Albums and No. 143 on the Billboard 200, returning to straightforward rock with live-band energy. Freedom's Goblin (2018, Drag City), a double album, hit No. 1 on Independent Albums and No. 104 on the Billboard 200, exploring eclectic jams and social themes. First Taste (2019, Drag City) debuted at No. 1 on Independent Albums and No. 102 on the Billboard 200, incorporating horns and unconventional instrumentation. Harmonizer (2021, Sub Pop) reached No. 2 on Independent Albums and No. 137 on the Billboard 200, recorded during the COVID-19 pandemic with glossy, synth-rock vibes. "Hello, Hi" (2022, Drag City) peaked at No. 3 on Independent Albums, delivering upbeat power-pop tracks self-produced in his home studio. Three Bells (2024, Drag City) entered at No. 4 on Independent Albums and No. 156 on the Billboard 200, featuring raw, emotional songwriting inspired by loss. Love Rudiments (2024, Drag City) is an instrumental percussion album, self-performed on trap kits, timpani, vibraphone, xylophone, and layered percussion, with no chart entries. Possession (2025, Drag City) debuted at No. 5 on Independent Albums, a concise collection of psych-rock tracks released amid Segall's ongoing evolution. None of Segall's solo albums have received RIAA certifications, underscoring his niche appeal in the alternative rock landscape.Band and collaborative albums
Ty Segall has extended his prolific output through various band projects and collaborations, often shifting roles to emphasize ensemble interplay and experimental textures. These works showcase his contributions as a multi-instrumentalist, particularly on drums, while collaborating with longtime associates from the garage and psych rock scenes. Key projects include high-energy garage rock with the Ty Segall Band, heavy psychedelic explorations with Fuzz, and more fluid, collective efforts under groups like The Muggers and the Freedom Band. The Ty Segall Band's debut album, Slaughterhouse, released in 2012 on In the Red Records, marked an early collaborative peak, blending raw garage punk with horn-driven chaos.[38] Segall handled lead vocals and guitar, joined by Mikal Cronin on tenor saxophone, guitar, and keyboards, Emily Rose Epstein on bass, and Jordan Louis on drums, creating a visceral, live-wire sound across 11 tracks.[122] This supergroup dynamic, drawing from Segall's circle including Cronin, emphasized collective improvisation over solo dominance.[123] In 2011, Segall co-founded the power trio Fuzz with guitarist/vocalist Charles Moothart and bassist/vocalist Chad Ubovich, where he primarily played drums to channel heavy psych and stoner rock influences.[124] The band's self-titled debut arrived in 2013 via In the Red, featuring riff-heavy tracks like "What's in My Head?" that highlighted Segall's thunderous percussion and shared vocal duties.[125] Fuzz followed with II in 2015 and III in 2020, both on In the Red, evolving toward denser, more orchestral psych arrangements while maintaining the trio's core lineup.[126] Emotional Mugger (2016) was supported by a touring collective known as The Muggers, featuring Segall on vocals, guitar, keyboards, bass, and drums, augmented by collaborators including Cory Hanson (keyboards from Wand), Emmett Kelly (guitar), and Mikal Cronin (bass guitar). This context infused the album's warped funk and proto-metal with a sense of communal absurdity, as evidenced by touring performances where the group adopted theatrical personas.[58] Segall formed the Freedom Band around 2016, a rotating ensemble that contributed to Freedom's Goblin (2018) on Drag City, credited jointly to Ty Segall & Freedom Band. Here, Segall led on guitar and vocals, with key members like bassist Jeanine Pesce, keyboardist Ben Boye, and percussionist Michael Red contributed to the album's eclectic 19-track sprawl blending folk, psych, and garage elements.[127] The Freedom Band's involvement extended to First Taste (2019), also on Drag City, where Segall again fronted on guitar and vocals amid contributions from Pesce, Boye, and others on saxophone and additional percussion, pushing toward avant-garde and world music textures.[128]| Project | Album | Year | Label | Segall's Primary Role | Key Collaborators |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ty Segall Band | Slaughterhouse | 2012 | In the Red | Vocals, guitar | Mikal Cronin (sax, guitar), Emily Rose Epstein (bass), Jordan Louis (drums)[122] |
| Fuzz | Fuzz | 2013 | In the Red | Drums, vocals | Charles Moothart (guitar, vocals), Chad Ubovich (bass, vocals)[126] |
| Fuzz | II | 2015 | In the Red | Drums, vocals | Charles Moothart (guitar, vocals), Chad Ubovich (bass, vocals)[126] |
| Fuzz | III | 2020 | In the Red | Drums, vocals | Charles Moothart (guitar, vocals), Chad Ubovich (bass, vocals)[126] |
| The Muggers | Emotional Mugger (touring support) | 2016 | Drag City | Vocals, guitar, multi-instrumentalist | Cory Hanson (keyboards), Emmett Kelly (guitar), Mikal Cronin (bass) |
| Ty Segall & Freedom Band | Freedom's Goblin | 2018 | Drag City | Guitar, vocals | Jeanine Pesce (bass), Ben Boye (keyboards), Michael Red (percussion)[127] |
| Freedom Band (contrib.) | First Taste | 2019 | Drag City | Guitar, vocals | Jeanine Pesce (bass), Ben Boye (keyboards), additional horns/percussion[129] |