Somewhere between the ghosts of the ‘90s and the fractured noise of modern life, a band like Hausers doesn’t just emerge — it materializes.
No stage lights. No label machinery. No carefully curated myth.
Just three musicians out of Milan — Cris, Mao, and Agos — building something raw, cinematic, and deeply human from the inside out.
They didn’t meet in some romantic rehearsal space or backstage chaos. They found each other the way so many things happen now — quietly, online — exchanging fragments of sound until something undeniable took shape.
What came out of that exchange is Hausers — an alt-rock project that leans into atmosphere over spectacle, intimacy over perfection, and truth over trend.
Their new single, “Calling My Gen,” is a haunting, slow-burn reflection on lost friendships and a generation stuck between analog memories and digital noise — a song that doesn’t scream for attention, but lingers long after it’s gone.
This is not a band chasing the algorithm.
This is a band documenting a feeling.
Let’s get into it.
A: We didn’t meet in person — we found each other on a musicians’ website, each on our own, exchanging material without knowing one another beforehand. It was a slow and natural process. Three people who weren’t looking for each other, but who recognized something in common.
A: For me, probably when I realized I couldn’t stop. I lived through the ’90s, had real opportunities to break through with previous bands… then it all ended abruptly. Writing songs alone became a physical need.
A: No, it came naturally. We’ve all already given everything in different phases of life. Hausers is the space we carved out inside a “normal life.”
A: The freedom to not explain anything to anyone. We could release constantly, but we choose to take our time. No pressure, no deadlines — just care for the details.
A: Time. We never have enough. Total autonomy demands energy — and we operate like our budget is zero, by philosophy. Substance over numbers.
A: Atmosphere, always. Everything begins with something intimate and direct.
A: From Lanegan, intimacy. From Pumpkins, tension between fragile and powerful. From STP, emotional credibility — believing something even if you don’t fully understand it.
A: No — but that mood we represent isn’t dead, it’s dormant. And it will come back.
A: From the frustration of becoming an adult — balancing private life with generational change.
A: Both. But it’s also a call to arms — not to look back, but to pass something forward.
A: It’s the end of carefree living — when rebellion becomes responsibility, but the emotion never disappears, it just transforms.
A: Constant exchange of ideas. No fixed process — just dialogue that occasionally becomes something finished.
A: Yes. And often the demo has something the final version can’t replicate — imperfection is authenticity.
A: When it crystallizes the moment it was born from.
A: Pragmatism — and reality. The live scene isn’t what it used to be.
A: Fundamental. But we’ve chosen to exist in the shadows — no faces, no fixed identity yet. Just the music.
A: Always an experience — never just a product.
A: Easier to create, harder to be heard. Substance still matters more than numbers.
A: Darker, more cinematic — and more chapters of Cyborg City.
A: The fact that we still have something to say — and we don’t need permission to say it.
Hausers aren’t trying to win the moment — they’re trying to capture it.
In a world flooded with content, algorithms, and instant gratification, they’ve chosen something slower, riskier… and arguably more honest.
No shortcuts. No noise for the sake of noise.
Just songs that feel like fragments of a life lived somewhere between who we were and who we’re becoming.
“Calling My Gen” isn’t just a track — it’s a signal. A quiet one, maybe. But the kind that finds you when you need it.
You can stream it now on Spotify, check out the video on YouTube, and follow Hausers across social media — but more importantly, listen closely.
Because bands like this don’t shout.
They echo.
🎸 KJAGRadio.com Exclusive The Real McKenzies Sharpen the Blade with “Black Agnes” — Celtic Punk…