Eva Moolchan aka Sneaks (source)

seen from Canada
seen from Switzerland
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Japan
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from Italy

seen from Argentina

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from Spain

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
Eva Moolchan aka Sneaks (source)
LGBTQ and Ethiopian: Julie Mehretu and Eva Moolchan
Sneaks • Figure 8
Sneaks - Highway Hypnosis
Just as she takes up space in the male-dominated Baltimore–Washington metropolitan area punk scene, Sneaks aka Eva Moolchan takes up space among the patriarchy. Highway Hypnosis plays on hip-hop, post-punk, and invented words to fill a gap between the feminist underground and genre-specific singles charts. Through it, Moolchan joins the resistance forged by queer black feminists who create, explore, empower, conquer, and play bass.
Flashes of Robyn, Britney Spears, Jock Jams, Nirvana, recess hour on the blacktop, M.I.A., Lil Mama, a hacky sack circle, Aaliyah, and your first Warped Tour experience somehow all make sense inside the mind attached to ears experiencing Highway Hypnosis.
LOCAL ANESTHETIC: Sneaks
Ranked one of the best D.C.-based rock artists by The FADER, Sneaks is the fantastic post-punk project from Eva Moolchan. The singer and bassist creates minimalist music with hints of punk and hip-hop with only a drum machine, bass, and her distinct voice. Moolchan has toured with Parquet Courts, Downtown Boys, and, most recently, Chastity Belt.
I caught the end of a Sneaks performance at a free Record Store Day show in Brooklyn this year. Moolchan and her DJ, Toyomansi (Dylan Ubaldo), played a showcase before the headliner, Sunflower Bean. Although the audience grew and only half-heartedly listened, the beat was enough to get people nodding their heads and swaying ever so slightly.
The duo sped up their songs and seamlessly flowed from one track to another, highlighting the cohesive sound of Sneaks’ music. Moolchan’s magnetic presence and unique voice made for an outstanding concert and I can’t wait to catch her again the next time she is on tour.
Moolchan is a Silver Spring native who grew up in the local music scene. She played in a punk band, Young Trynas, and in the short-lived project, Blood, with members of Priests and Gauche before focusing on her solo work as Sneaks.
Gymnastics, Sneaks’ first album, was released on tape through Sister Polygon in 2015 after some encouragement from friend, Priests vocalists, and label co-founder, Katie Alice Greer. Since then, Moolchan has signed to Merge Records, which reissued Gymnastics in 2016 in addition to releasing her most recent album, It’s a Myth, this year.
Both albums are shorter than 20 minutes with many of the songs clocking in at less than two minutes. Moolchan’s spoken word style of performing often feels like poetry with lyrics that are abstract and rely on metaphors.
In “New Taste,” the lyrics recount what may be a grocery list or daily mundane observations — loose change, yogurt, and eye drops are all subjects she mulls over. Maybe the lyrics refer to how your taste preferences change when you grow up or how you learn to like new things when you fall in love. Moolchan skilfully repurposes mundane items as intriguing catalysts of change.
Other songs, however, are more obvious, yet no less poetic. In “X.T.Y.,” she chants, “Anxiety / You take the best of me / You turn me inside out / And then you ruin me.” Her haunting, almost expressionless voice speaks over a distorted bass, effectively portraying the exasperation of facing anxiety.
Each Sneaks song seems to live on its own, telling a complete story even when it’s as short as the 42-second track “No Problem.” But paradoxically, her music is somehow both fulfilling while still leaving you wanting more.
-Gabby Brooks
When I was in kindergarten I made a painting and I gave it to my dad. When I look at it now, through the eyes of an adult, I can see it doesn’t just look like a blob. It also looks like a suitcase, which by the way is another meaning of the word portmanteau. If I wanted to sound clever I might even tell you that’s definitely what it is, or what I meant it to be. But I know that when I made this painting it was more of a gesture than an accurate, detailed representation. That’s okay. I would see it every time I went into the music room. I would see my dad’s pride in it. And that was enough for me to keep painting…
WANTED/NEEDED/LOVED: Sneaks’s Paintbrush
Ethiopian-American spoken-word artist and musician Eva Moolchan better known as Sneaks
Ethiopian-American musician and spoken-word artist Eva Moolchan better known as Sneaks