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Brooklyn's Bodega puts on art punk party in Pittsburgh concert

Mike Palm
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Mike Palm | TribLive
Bodega vocalist Nikki Belfiglio performs, flanked by bassist Tim Race and percussionist Adam Shumski, on Wednesday Club Cafe in Pittsburgh.
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Mike Palm | TribLive
Bodega guitarist/singer Ben Hozie performs Wednesday at Club Cafe in Pittsburgh.
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Mike Palm | TribLive
Bodega guitarist Dan Ryan performs Wednesday at Club Cafe in Pittsburgh.
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Mike Palm | TribLive
Big Bliss’ Tim Race and Anjoli Simone perform Wednesday at Club Cafe in Pittsburgh.
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Mike Palm | TribLive
Pittsburgh’s Sunny Daze & the Weathermen perform Wednesday at Club Cafe in Pittsburgh.

The lyrical content for Brooklyn’s Bodega may be serious — the absurdity of modern life, consumerism, technology, identity and more — but the messages are wrapped up in catchy, post-punk nuggets.

In their show Wednesday at Club Cafe on Pittsburgh’s South Side, Bodega showcased their newest album, “Our Band Could Be Yr Life” — named in a nod to Michael Azerrad’s book chronicling underground rock bands, “Our Band Could Be Your Life.”

Singer Nikki Belfiglio was front and center, keeping time on a hi-hat, dancing and engaging the crowd, while guitarist/singer Ben Hozie rocked a giant furry hat to her right. Joined by guitarist Dan Ryan, stand-up percussionist Adam Shumski and bassist Tim Bliss (who pulled double duty fronting opener Big Bliss), Bodega delivered a fun, art punk party to Pittsburgh.

When a member of the crowd asked if they’d be playing “new” music or “new, new” music, Hozie joked that they’d be playing “nu” metal, delivering the first two notes of Limp Bizkit’s “Break Stuff” before playing “Dedicated to the Dedicated.”

Other highlights included “ATM,” “Cultural Consumer III,” “Gyrate” and “City Is Taken,” as well as a variety of songs that would have fit right in alongside a B-52s, Talking Heads or Ramones show.

To mark the last night with Big Bliss, both bands crammed on to the stage for a cover of Wire’s “Mannequin,” with the jam almost a tour tradition, according to Belfiglio.

“If you don’t, you’re out of DIY,” she joked. “A tragedy, I know.”

New York City’s Big Bliss — the project of brothers Tim and Cory Race — delivered a post-punk set peppered with songs from 2023’s “Vital Return,” like “Solace” and closer “Tell Me When You’re Ready,” as well as a song released just last week, “You’re A Man.”

Pittsburgh’s Sunny Daze & the Weathermen opened the show with 30 minutes of energetic, surf-tinged psychedelic rock — what they call “flower punk.”

Mike Palm is a TribLive digital producer who also writes music reviews and features. A Westmoreland County native, he joined the Trib in 2001, where he spent years on the sports copy desk, including serving as night sports editor. He has been with the multimedia staff since 2013. He can be reached at mpalm@triblive.com.

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