![The Messenger Birds](https://cdn.hourdetroit.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/20/2019/07/094A9824-2.cx_.jpg)
The members of the Detroit rock band known as The Messenger Birds donβt call themselves a rock band. Guitarist Parker Bengry and drummer Chris Williams nonchalantly refer to themselves as βjust two guysβ (though youβd think they were a four-piece based on their multi-layered sound). As far as their music goes, though, if you refer to their style as garage rock, grunge, or, their favorite genre, βdoom blues,β they wonβt stop you. All titles aside, with almost 150,000 listeners on Spotify and a performance at Mo Pop scheduled this month, perhaps the best thing to call them right now is simply, popular.
Bengry and Williams have been playing music together since 2006, when the pair met during a pre-high school hockey camp at St. Maryβs Preparatory in Orchard Lake. In addition to a love for skating, the two found they also shared a passion for grunge bands like Nirvana and more lighthearted music like Tenacious D. They started jamming in Williamsβ basement, recording on a karaoke machine and listening to their impromptu riffs on the way to practice. Back then, neither of the musicians took their duo seriously, but in 2013, they realized theyβd hit on something. βWe started experimenting with this low-end, blast-you-in-the-face sound,β Bengry says. βWe combined six or seven different genres and just made what we wanted, and we liked it.β
βTomorrow, there could be another artist just as talented and they might make it or they might not.β βParker Bengry, guitaristΜύ
Over the next few years, the duo honed their craft and fans throughout metro Detroit latched on. They played a variety of bars and art shows and opened for rockers like Hinds and The Fall of Troy. In 2016, the band was invited to play at Mo Pop as a last-minute replacement, but Bengry was in New York City and wouldnβt make it back in time for the performance. Now, three years later, theyβre on the lineup for the July 27 and 28 festival beneath familiar names like Tame Impala and Vampire Weekend. βWe feel like weβve earned it since that missed opportunity,β Williams says. βIt feels like the right time, right place.β
Theyβve certainly earned a larger audience. In 2018, the band released their most popular single βPhantom Limbβ β a gruff, loud, and energetic meditation on the crippling effects of anxiety and depression that has more than 2.2 million plays on Spotify. The song has marked a jumping-off point for the duo, but both members have managed to spend long enough in the industry to remain levelheaded about the attention. βIt still doesnβt really mean a lot,β Bengry says. βItβs just a step. Everything is just one step after the other.β
![The Messenger Birds](https://cdn.hourdetroit.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/20/2019/07/094A9819-4.cx_.jpg)
That doesnβt mean, of course, that they donβt enjoy their growing number of followers. They do. But like any authentic rock band, popularity isnβt the goal. βWeβre trying to explore and push what two guys can do on stage,β Bengry says. βWeβve never made music for other people, but I donβt think we would be in this if we didnβt think it could go somewhere.β
After the Messenger Birds play Mo Pop, they hope to expand their reach even further. Amidst the momentum of the festival, theyβll embark on a Midwest and East Coast tour and release their new album Everything Has to Fall Apart Eventually β a fitting title for a pair that humbly recognizes the role that chance plays in a musicianβs success. βYou could be Billie Eilish or BeyoncΓ© or any big artist in the world,β Bengry says. βBut tomorrow, there could be another artist just as talented and they might make it, or they might not. You never know whatβs going to happen.β
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Tame Impala
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Vampire Weekend
The Grammy Award-winning indie pop band from New York is performing at Mo Pop in support of their latest album, Father of the Bride.
Ella Mai
The English singer broke the record for most weeks at No. 1 for a song by a woman on the R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay Chart for her hit βBooβd Up.β
The Story so Far
This pop-punk band out of California often displays an edgier take on the genre, incorporating elements of punk rock, powerful guitar, and gritty vocals.
Kali Uchis
Taking influences fromΜύ R&B, jazz, and soul, Kali Uchisβ music has been called βgenre-defyingβ by the Chicago Tribune. βAshley Winn
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