“Pom Pom Squad Kill Their Inner Cheerleader: Mia Berrin of Brooklyn alt-rockers the Pom Pom Squad is not going to take any of your shit. None of it! The emotive vocalist and songwriter has a voice that can cut through diamond while simultaneously soothing the savage beast. Take recent single “Lux” – a slab of punk therapy written when she was 17 about unwelcome male attention. That was the Pom Pom Squad’s first single for City Slang Records, a long-awaited release for a song that everybody should hear.
The band formed in the summer after Berrin’s senior year of high school, completed by Shelby Keller (drums), Mari Alé Figeman (bass), and Alex Mercuri (guitar). She had long been an obsessive music fan (her words). But it wasn’t until she was 18 that she realized she could actually release her own stuff.
“I loved bands,” she says. “I was following the New York and L.A. DIY scene throughout high school so became very accustomed with all of the DIY venues on the east and west coasts and the major cities. It was like, DIY artists were real rock stars to me. It became more accessible, seeing something like that. I think I started the band initially as a form of self expression, and then also I am very visually influenced so it became this multimedia outlet and a way for me to connect all of my artistic interests.”
She quickly found a sound through her adoration of punk, grunge and riot grrrl, but also ‘50s and ‘60s pop and Motown.
“I really love how cinematic the music of that era was,” she says. “There’s this classic rockist versus popist argument of, ‘pop is artificial and rock is organic and analog.’ Something that was so interesting is that pop music of that era has that creepy saccharine feel to it. But it also has the mystique of an analog recording process. As a person of color, I was always treated like I was weird for liking rock music. So carving out that space and then also being able to tie it into the roots of rock music as I know and understand it. Playing on the history of music through my own lens.”
Berrin and the band remain based in Brooklyn, and she describes the scene there and in NYC as “resilient.” It sure has had to be of late, though Berrin admits that she has enjoyed the alone time in lockdown.
“Pom Pom Squad has been my band since high school, and then for the last five years I was in college and doing day jobs,” she says. “Playing my own way and playing six or seven times a month until you could afford to do a show every couple of months. I needed some time for my brain to readjust and tap back into a creative space.”
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