Written by Ella Hardie | Photo Courtesy of Poolish
âWell, when you bake sourdough, you have to start by taking care of a combination of water and flour, and poolish is a ratio of water and flour,â James explains. Matthew interjects: âDoesnât it also have commercial yeast in it? I thought it was a combination of sourdough starter and commercial yeastâŚâ James concurs. Apparently theyâve both read The Tartine Bread Cookbook. In baking, poolish is considered the âliquid version of a sponge,â and pre-fermentation is a vital step in the baking process that results in a better loafâthe flavors have time to fully develop and the increased acidity builds up resistance to mold, giving the bread a longer shelf life. Part water, part flour, part beer-sodden-alt-country, part slowcore-post-rock (with a bit of yeast/grunge?), Poolish’s debut EP Slip-On manages to capture the ephemerality of a young band in their early stages while theyâre still actively fermenting. The record is undeniably an achievement in and of itselfâthis âfermentationâ isnât necessarily a means to an end, but a constant state of sonic absorption, collaboration, and evolution.
That bread metaphor can only go so far: listening to Poolish is a lot like slipping on a pair of boots you broke in years ago or sewing a new button onto an old sweater. They carry well-worn traditions of rock nâroll with a distinctly Midwestern twang and an endearingly palpable sense of reverence for musicians whoâve come before them, from local acts to all-timers. Itâs hard to believe Poolish only have one EP under their belt when you see them play live, a natural result of each memberâs storied history within the DePaul-adjacent DIY sceneâfor most of them, this isn’t their first band. With the chemistry of old friends and the composure of a group well beyond their years, their performances remain underscored by the playful spirit of a weeknight jam sesh in someoneâs bedroom, basement, or garage. Itâs the kind of spirit that makes you feel nostalgic for the night before; a call to simultaneously celebrate and mourn your youth while youâre still in the thick of it, to sway along and soak it all up.
This interview features Matthew Boyd (guitar/vocals), Danny Barney (guitar/vocals), Cece McIntyre (violin), Tyler Cook (bass), James Matthews (drums), various members of the band Glass-Beagle, and my beloved friend Cordia Ritz (for a second at the end). It has been edited and condensed for (relative) clarity.Â
1/8/2026: Glass-Beagle, Poolish, and Marble Teeth @ Empty Bottle
I imagined this interview taking place outside over a cigarette after their set, but itâs Chicago’s rainiest January day in 50 years and the Empty Bottleâs small awning can only withstand so much⌠I once again find myself in the green room, but this time weâve formed a circle on and around the couch by the door. Iâm hunched over on a small ottoman with Cece sitting on the floor to my right, James and Tyler on the couch across from me, Matthew and Danny in swivel chairs on my left. We all chat for a few minutes and Marble Teethâs set begins downstairs before I start recording:
ELLA HARDIE: Alright guys, some of you know the drillâ
(For context, the first interview I ever did was with James and Matthewâs other band, Intoner, a couple years ago at Archieâs Cafe (RIP) where I asked the same first question.)
EH: How would you rate your set tonight out of 10?
DANNY BARNEY: Ten! It was fun, I like that we messed up a bunchâ
Everyone laughs.
DB: I donât like playing straight, I like that we were having fun⌠And Empty Bottle is the best place ever.
JAMES MATTHEWS: Yeah, Iâm gonna go ten as wellâ
MATTHEW BOYD: Iâm gonna go nine and half because of my major fuck-up on that one songâ
Everyone: No! That made it better, that made it a tenâ
MB: But I feel like I canât give it a tenâŚbecause of thatâŚ
CECE MCINTYRE: Well, Iâm gonna give it a ten. For friendship.
EH: For the power of friendshipâ
CM: The Power of Friendship was up on that stage tonight.
EH: Thatâs beautiful. Tyler, are you also going with ten?
TYLER COOK: Yeah, ten. It was really great, I was on itâ
DB: Itâs always either a ten or a five. Itâs never, like, an eight.
Laughter.
EH: Have you had a five recently�
DB: Yeah, definitely. [________] was a fiveâ
MB: [_________] was great! That was a fun show!
JM: No, [_________] was like, an eight or a nine.
DB: Thereâs no eightâs!
***
EH: Have you guys ever done a formal interview before? Like, with this band?
MB: No, I donât think soâ
EH: Ok perfect, Iâll try to keep the questions pretty broad. Introduce yourselves!
James sits up.
JM: Iâm James⌠I play drumsâ
I laugh a little and interrupt:
EH: Sorry, my bad, I was thinking more like a âWe areâŚâ kinda vibeâ
JM: Ohhhh! Weâre a band. A rock band. A five-piece rock bandâ
Nathan from Glass-Beagle enters the green room and stands behind Cece by the door:
DB: Hiiiiiiiii!
NATHAN: Heyooooooo!
DB: Whatâs goinâ on?
N: Poolish Best Band Ever, thatâs whatâs goinâ on!
Everyone âyeahhhhââs & âwooââs.
EH: Thatâs going in the interview.
N: Poolish goated!
Nathan walks down the hall into another room and closes the door behind him.
EH: Ok, whatâs the origin story? âCuz a lot of you were in bands before this, or are currently in other bandsâ
JM: So me and Matthew really wanted to start a slowcore bandâ
MB: Thatâs so funnyâ
EH: Thatâs not what you guys are doing at allâ
JM: Yeah, we wanted to sound like Duster⌠But it was just us two, and I remember going over to Matthewâs place and we recorded demos and stuff, and then we ran into Danny at a showâat the Cruel farewell showâ
DB: Well, you guys hit me up before thatâ
MB: I was scoping him out because he follows the slowcore appreciation pageâ
DB: Wait, was that actually why?
MB: No.
Laughter.
JM: So we surrounded him at Sleeping Village and asked him if he wanted to jam with us, and he said yeah. Then the three of us jammed for a couple monthsâ
MB: And then we stole Ian from Daundry for a while, and then he got too busy, and then we brought Tyler into the bandâ
TC: That was after the second Bottle gig⌠Ian played the first one, right?
MB: Yeah, he played likeâŚseven shows with us? Five shows?
Nathan returns:
DB: Do you wanna say something for the interview?
N: Do I wanna say something for the interview?
CM: What do you want to say, on the record?
N: Umm⌠Poolish is the most goated band in Chicago that does a cover of âHot Burrito #2.â Itâs not the best Flying Burrito Brothers song, but itâs closeâ
DB: Damn, thatâs a hot takeâ
MB: Whatâs your favorite one?
N: I donât know! I dunno, I really donât knowâŚbut I donât think thatâs the best one. Itâs gotta be a cover, I feel like it has to beâ
DB: I like âDo Right WomanâŚâ
TC: Yeah, thatâs a good oneâ
N: No, wait, wait, wait! âSin City!â
TC: But thatâs an original, right?
N: Oh, thatâs true, thatâs trueâŚ
The conversation devolves into everyone shouting out their favorite Flying Burrito Brothers songs: âDark End of the Street,â âColorado,â âWheels,â etc.
A beat. Everyone cracks up.
EH: Thank you for your time.
N: Hot Takes! âHot Burritoâ Takes!
Nathan heads back downstairs to catch the rest of the Marble Teeth set.
EH: Alright, letâs get back into it: Cece, how âbout you? Howâd you get in the mix?
MB: Ceceâs a new additionâ
CM: Yeah, Iâm the most recent addition, I wanna say aboutâŚa month and a half ago? But weâve known each other for a while. They reached out and asked if I would play the Hot Burrito cover and one other song with them at the Hideout show. After a couple rehearsals I just sortaâŚweaseled my way into doing more songs and I won over the hearts and minds, and now Iâm part of the band.
MB: No, she played with us at one rehearsal and we begged her to join the bandâ
JM: Thatâs actually exactly what happenedâ
Laughter.
CM: Well, you guys were being very nonchalant about it, so I couldnât really tellâ
EH: Two sides of every storyâŚ

EH: You guys released your first record, Slip-On, back in September. How did you approach this project in terms of trying to establish your sound? Were you kinda throwing everything at the wall or did you have a clear vision?
MB: Whatâs funny is that the first thing we ever recorded is not released⌠Itâs a slowcore EP with, like, four songs that are mostly instrumentalâ
DB: But then everyone fell asleep when we listened to it.
Everyone laughs.
MB: Yeah⌠By then we were playing live and we were writing stuff that really wasnât that vibe, we were definitely moving away from that. We had these four songs [on the EP] that I still think are a little more in the vein of what we first were writing, at least compared to where we are now. We recorded that album in [our friend] Grantâs roomâ
EH: Aw, really?
This time, Bayden from Glass-Beagle enters the room:
B: You guys sounded great out there!
Poolish: Thank you so much!
B: I love when thereâs two singers!
More thank-youâs and compliments exchanged.
He walks down the hallway. Matthew doesnât miss a beat:
MB: But yeah, we recorded in Grantâs room, Tyler engineered it, it was fun! We just did it in a weekend in the basementâ
TC: I recorded it, I wasnât the mixing engineer. I did the trackingâ
MB: Oh yeah, Gabe Bostick mixed it.
JM: I feel like recording it in a house made it feel super chill. I didnât feel a rush at all, we could literally just kinda sit in thereâ
MB: Yeah, there wasnât any pressure on studio time⌠Well, there was pressure from Grantâ
JM: There were times when we were like, âOhhh, Grantâs coming home! We gotta wrap it up!â But other than that, it was just a really good environment.
TC: It was just throwinâ stuff at the wall, we had no idea really what we were doingâ
MB: We all went to get tacos while Tyler tracked the bass partâ
TC: Yeah, everybody left⌠They also left when I tracked the tambourine which took, like, an hourâ
JM: I was making you food!
TC: Yeah, youâre rightâ
MB: Oh yeah, we all ate potato soup at the end of itâ
TC: It was fantastic.
EH: James, you should post the soup recipe on your Substack that has gone extremely quiet.
JM: Yâknow, thatâs actually on my Resolutions List, to write out my recipes more. It takes a lot of work to write out recipes, itâs like way more than youâd thinkâ
More talking about Substack and recipes that I have to cut for time:
EH: So, whatâd you guys learn from this first record and what are you bringing into the next one? Are you cooking as we speak?
I make myself laugh with the âcookingâ comment after the Substack sidebar.
JM: We are cooking.
DB: So pretty much weâre just bringing an âold-familiarâŚâ
Everyone tries to hold it together as Danny talks:
DB: âNew spin on a classicâ kinda thingâŚ
Everyone cracks up and rolls their eyes.
JM: I couldnât have put it better myself.
DB: Weâre just rockinâ. We havenât really recorded most of it yet, but the first song we did really straight and tight and it was cool. Super exact. But the rest of the songs are gonna be so barely together. Weâre gonna play, like, one takeâ
MB: Weâre gonna be lowkey out of tune nâ shitâ
TC: Yeah, no tuningâs the rule on the new record.
JM: No tuningâŚ
DB: Itâs gonna be like spaghettiâ
EH: This sounds very postmodernâŚ
James reels it back in:
JM: No, but Jay Gardoquiâs gonna produce it and heâs very passionate about what he does. He wants to try a whole bunch of things and I think itâs gonna be, again, kinda throwing shit at the wall, but this time in a studio.
MB: In a real, legitimate studio.
A third (and final) member of Glass-Beagle, Jack, walks into the green room:
JM: Whatâs up!
J: âSup dude?
More compliments about the show ensue and Jack walks away down the hall.
JM: Thatâs my boy, JackâŚ
Everyone quietly laughs as the door loudly creaks shut behind him.

EH: Iâm curious about your transition from âslowcoreâ to the twangy rock nâ roll, alt-country situation you guys have going now. What happened?
TC: It was, like, Danny and I trying to convince themâ
DB: Thatâs the part that theyâll leave out, that Tyler and I had to religiously convert this band into something elseâ
TC: And now itâs perfect.
DB: They kinda went from a Protestant band to a Catholic bandâ
Laughter.
DB: Slowly itâs become less of what Tyler and I want, itâs less of what James and Matthew want, and itâs more about what the band wants to do.
MB: I do feel like thatâs what happened. We started writing songs as a group instead of one person bringing songs in for the rest of us to play, and it just started sounding like thatâ
TC: With the new song we were working on, it was really like: âYou try this and then you try thatââ
JM: And sometimes itâs just the ugliest shit, it just doesnât work, but I think thatâs where itâs just throwing everything out into one vesselâ
DB: And now we have a new mediator, Cece. Every final decisionâs always gonna be up to youâ
CM: Yep, Iâm the tiebreaker now.
JM: I feel like all of them introduced me to a lot of music that I now feel really inspired by.
EH: What kind of stuff?
JM: Like, the fuckinâ Flying Burrito Brothers and shit like that, just older stuff that I didnât grow up knowing or know before I was playing in this band. I feel like Iâve been exposed to more music through this band than I have through anything else.
Someone (I canât tell who) whistles in appreciation.
EH: Who are some of your other influences?
TC & MB: Neil Youngâ
EH: Oh My GodâŚ
TC: Wait, cut thatâ
Everyone groans/cracks up.
We all take a beat to recover from that.
MB: Yeah, Neil⌠Bob DylanâŚ
DB: Bob Dylan?
TC: Bob Dylan�
Another eruption of laughter.
MB: I mean, it doesnât sound like Bob Dylan, but I love Bob Dylan, yâknow?
TC: So, spirituallyâŚ
MB: I also love George Harrison a lot. All Things Must Pass is one of my favorite records.
EH: How about you Danny? You seem like youâve got a lot to sayâŚ
DB: For influences? Oh man, Iâd sayâ
TC: JerryâŚ
DB: Yeah, Jerry Garcia from The Grateful Dead.
MB: Are you serious?
JM: BruhâŚ
TC: fakemink?
DB: No, noâ
MB: 2hollis?
DB: No, noâ
JM: Letâs keep going! EsDeeKidâ
Laughter. Danny shakes his head.
DB: Weâre trying to get on some Alex G vibes, thatâs pretty much it.
MB: Sorta like an Alex G copy-paste-type-thingâ
TC: More of like an unreleased Alex G that you find on YouTubeâ
MB & JM: Alex G offline, yeahâ
DB: And anything on Instagram that makes me sad, like, any songâ
JM: Like with Bart?
DB: No, not Bart, but like, the sad-rock sounds on Instagramâ
MB: Oh, like Duster?
DB: Yeah, weâre trying to be like Duster.
Laughter.
***
EH: Whatâs special about playing music in Chicago? Where are some of your favorite places to play?
CM: Oh gosh⌠My favorite thing about playing music in Chicago is the people. This is such an incredibly supportive environment and everyone is very collaborativeâeveryone wants to be playing with each other and forming new groups, itâs very inspiring. As for venues, I love the Empty Bottle, this was my first time playing here and it was a really great experience.
JM: Yeah, Empty Bottle, favorite venue. I like the community that surrounds the music here, itâs kinda the coolest people. Everyone is so friendly and very talented and has a lot going on, itâs really easy to make new friends.
EH: Totally. I donât get a ton of competitive vibes here, especially being a major cityâ
TC: I feel very competitiveâ
DB: I was gonna sayâ
Laughter. Theyâre (half) kidding.
TC: There are so many times where Iâve been like, âYeah, we gotta play better than those guys,â
DB: No, this is definitely a race to the top. This shit is not fun at allâŚ
EH: Yeah, I hate everyone in this room actuallyâŚ
JM: Alright Danny, actually go.
DB: That was my answer! I think, yâknow, you gotta rock for fun but you also gotta try your hardest or else no oneâs gonna pay attention.
EH: True.
JM: Whatâs your favorite venue?
DB: Well, one weâre playing very soon, Sunflower House. Thatâs like, my favorite venueâ
EH: Thatâs our friendâs old apartment, actuallyâ
MB: Wait, Sunflower House?
I turn to Cordia, whoâs been sitting behind me the whole time:
EH: Yes! Cordia, that one is [______]âs old placeâ
CR: Ohhh, rightâ
MB: Have you been to Wildwood, that DIY?
EH: I have notâŚ
MB: Thatâs [_________]âs old apartmentâ
CR: Wait, what? I guess we donât have to âdm for addressâ…
EH: Damn, why didnât they ever do that?
CR: They kind of didâ
MB: No, I know, I walked in and I was like: what the fuck Iâve been here for a house party before⌠It was crazy.
EH: Thatâs crazy. The next generation⌠Thatâs wildâ
MB: Wildwood! But yeah, that’s a good spot.
Laughter.
MB: There are just a lot of good bands here that are fun to play with. And it is supportive, I think, not competitive like Danny and Tyler think it is.
TC: I think we might get a little bit competitive in our heads, but I think thatâs healthy.
MB: Yeah, like, I want to be a better musician, butâ
TC: We love everybodyâ
MB: We love everyone, thereâs no hate, thereâs no beef. I dunno, I just like a lot of bands hereâ
TC: Joe Glass! Weâre beefing with Joe Glass, put that on the record.
MB: Oh yes, Joe Glass. Please put that on the record.
EH: I also have beef with Joe Glass.
MB: Everyone has beef with Joe Glass. âFuck Joe Glass! Fuck Snakewards!â
EH: Yeah, âNo one go to his show on Saturday that I changed my shift to go to!â
TC: Heâs blacklisted from any gigâ
Laughter.
EH: Tyler, what about you? Venues? Vibes? What makes Chicago so fertile for bands?
TC: I dunnoâŚI love the Hideoutâ
EH: Thatâs probably my favorite tooâ
TC: I think some kids had a lot of money and a lot of connections and now everybodyâs trying to get the same connections, so itâs really good for kinda working your way up in the scene. And a lot of the music is really good as well, which I really likeâ
MB: Thatâs a crazy answerâ
TC: No, thereâs a lot of connections here! Itâs like a mini-LA, yâknow? Like, you know a guy who knows a guy, and then you get signed toâ
MB: Youâre like, two steps away from Finn Wolfhard, broâ
EH: Maybe lessâŚ
TC: True⌠But then, out of all of it, thereâs good bands that poke through it.
Matthew laughs.
MB: Where was IâŚfavorite venue? I love the Empty Bottle. And I love the Hideout, those are two of my favorites.
TC: Oh, and Bookclub! Old BookclubâŚ
EH: I miss Old Bookclubâ
MB: Rest in peace.
TC: I think thatâs where we all met each other as a band and stuff.
MB: Yeah, we played with Soaps, Tylerâs band, at Old Bookclub a long time agoâ
EH: I think I was at that showâŚwith Mimaroglu?
CM: And thatâs where I met Matthew for the first time too!
MB: Yes, thatâs true! I worked with Ceceâs best friend at a bagel shop and I knew who she was before I met her. Fun fact.
***
EH: Any closing notes? Whatâs the haps, do you have anything coming out soon or any shows coming up that people should pay attention to? Any shoutouts?
TC: We have a single coming soon, a-side, b-side, put it on a â45â
MB: Weâre going to Indiana, and Milwaukee, and Madison soonâ
TC: We have merchâ
JM: We gotta come up with more merchâ
MB: Weâre gonna make more shirtsâ
CM: I think we should do beer koozies nextâ
MB: Yes! Or little bottle openers, that would be funâŚ
More murmurs about merch ensue.
TC: What are some bands I like⌠Shoutout to Feller, Joe Glass, Glass-Beagle, and Marble Teethâ
EH: And [Ceceâs other band] the Bootleggersâ
MB: And the Bootleggers, of course.
EH: Is that it? Who wants the last word?
CM: I love making music with my friends!
Perfect.
Listen to Poolish’s debut EP Slip-On out now!
