Tim Singer: The Meaningful Work of Bitter Branches

Brian Tunney
3 min readJul 26, 2022
Bitter Branches (Photo by Tami Seymour)

In 1995, Tim Singer wrote the hardcore blueprint for the post-college, enter the workforce existential crisis that many would encounter upon joining the 9–5 grind, from Deadguy’s first and only LP.

This job runs you
This day kills you
This suit owns you
This man tells you
What to do

Almost 30 years later, there’s no easy answer to the daily predicament of getting up and going to work without asking “Why?” Only more people asking “why?” (In March of 2022, 4.5 million people asked “Why?” before quitting their jobs.)

Tim Singer may have been on to something.

Originally part of the Boiling Point Zine editorial staff from NYC in the mid to late 80’s, Singer fronted hardcore band No Escape in South Jersey before moving to New Brunswick, N.J. and founding Deadguy, an early metalcore outfit that lived on Somerset Street and hosted basement shows. Deadguy was brutal, and the band imploded quickly, leaving behind one LP on Victory Records (“Fixation on a Co-Worker”) and a sense of “what the hell just happened?” once the album got into eager hands. New fans flocked to the record, and local legend grew. (Did they really want to sound more like Alice In Chains?) Singer, along with guitar player Keith Huckins objected to the band’s direction, then moved to Seattle to form a new band called Kiss It Goodbye. The rest of Deadguy stayed in New Brunswick to salvage the band, but it just wasn’t the same.

Meanwhile Kiss It Goodbye became really, really heavy, releasing an LP (“She Loves Me, She Loves Me Not”) on Revelation Records that was perhaps misunderstood at the time. Dropping an all-out hardcore metal approach for the dissonance and chaos of Am Rep influences such as Unsane and Today is The Day, Singer’s delivery became a unique sort of directed, guttural rant. Near the end of the band, he dropped the pre-written lyric sheet. He added, then subtracted where needed, but retained the dissonant anger and intensity. After getting kicked off an Obituary tour, the band finished its run in 1998, but left a mark on bands that included Botch, Daughters and Young Widows.

“Even though the Kiss It Goodbye thing, I was ambivalent about, my wife said I was much more complete version of myself when I was doing music,” Singer told the First Ever Podcast in 2021.

Still, Tim Singer seemingly stepped away from music, for what seemed like a decade or so. In 2012, Kiss It Goodbye played Revelation 25 in Pomona, California. In 2015, he returned with an EP on Deathwish from a band called Process Black, then sang back-ups for Every Time I Die in 2016. And it continued to snowball from there. Soon, No Escape was recording new material. Then Deadguy decided to reunite for a few shows.

And now, Singer is back with his latest project, Bitter Branches. “I liked where they were going musically before I even got there,” said Singer. “This is different, and it lands in the place where I’ve always wanted to be in. Laughing Hyenas, Shellac, Fugazi: what does that sound like with someone as manic as myself?”

Musically caught somewhere between D.C. urgency and Chicago angularity, Bitter Branches is not the sum of its influences. Rather, it puts the low end way up front, and allows Singer’s introspective anger to brim up, seethe and willfully object to the rules and norms of society. Bitter Branches released an EP in 2020, followed by a full length “Your Neighbors Are Failures” in 2022 on Equal Vision Records. Joined by Matt Ryan and Kevin Sommerville (guitar), Dan Yemin (bass) and Jeff Tirabassi (drums), Bitter Branches, is, like the rest of Singer’s projects, probably a few years ahead of its time, but a perfect outlet for his brand of timeless rage.

And though he questioned the 9–5 grind many years ago, Bitter Branches is evidence that Tim Singer still has meaningful work to do.

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