STREET PONY

Chicago-area band Street Pony is starting a stampede.

Their self-described “fury of madness and deliciousness” trips from thick fuzz-drenched ‘70s psych into epic prog-inspired storytelling and spacey 8-bit soundscapes before stealing Kenny Loggins’ car and driving it straight into a filthy Midwestern river.

Thanks to an early run of successful festival gigs and a steady stream of absurdist, surreal, gross, and hilarious Instagram posts, they had plenty of buzz when they blew up the closing slot at 2026’s Hotel Blotto festival.

By the time they delivered a scorching set at Chicago club Martyr’s a month later and beat a full lineup of other bands to win a coveted slot on the 2026 bill of Illinois festival Summer Camp, they were downright notorious.

That’s because their irreverent approach is backed by deep experience and serious, smart, and ambitious musicianship.

Joey LoPresti (guitar, vocals) has performed for over a decade at festivals and venues as part of regional hidden gem Alabaster.

Andrew Stump (keyboards) studied with Chicago composer and educator JeVrey Kowalkowski before joining acclaimed tribute projects An American Prayer and Tipsy Phuddled. He is heavily inspired by his favorite classical composers.

Chase Carlino (bass, vocals) is a professionally trained touring pro audio technician who was recently demoted to playing bass.

Christian Rogala (drums, percussion, unhinged roaring) was in a band with Eric Andre at Berklee before touring the world as a working musician and educator. He has been heard on Adult Swim alongside Stick Figure’s Johnny Cosmic as part of genre-bending multi-instrumentalists Fluid Minds.

Together, they create an infectious sound that lands somewhere between Dio, Dr. John, a hardcore pit, Ummagumma-era Pink Floyd, and a yacht rock compilation in a wildly original place where nasty guitar solos and fat grooves stop on a dime before pivoting into the next unexpected breakdown.

It’s catchy, funky, spacey, heavy, energetic, occasionally ridiculous, and very, very fun.

As Mike “Chief” Bolger of Mr. Blotto said in his introduction to their very first show, “If there’s no danger, is it really art? This could not work, or it could work phenomenally and you’re all here on the ground floor.”

Either way, this is Street Pony.