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Brigitte Calls Me Baby Don’t Mind If You Think They Sound Like the Smiths

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CitrixNews Staff
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Brigitte Calls Me Baby Don’t Mind If You Think They Sound Like the Smiths

By Andy Greene

Andy Greene

View all posts by Andy Greene April 13, 2026 Brigitte Calls Me Baby Scarlet Page

It’s very tough to offend the four members of the buzzy, post-punk throwback band Brigitte Calls Me Baby, because they’ve already heard it all. “People say, ‘Oh, it’s like Elvis had sex with the Strokes, who invited the 1975 and Interpol to the orgy,'” says frontman Wes Leavins, “not realizing what that ends up doing is piquing people’s curiosity — because I don’t know any band that sounds like those combinations.”

That eclectic fusion of influences, which also includes a healthy dose of the Smiths, has helped Brigitte Calls Me Baby rack up millions of Spotify plays, an appearance on The Kelly Clarkson Show, invitations to open for the Strokes, Muse, and Morrissey, and a string of sold-out club shows all across the world even though they formed a mere four years ago. At the moment, they’re taking a very short break following a long run of dates in Europe, where they travelled across the continent by van and lugged around their own gear.

“It’s exhausting,” says bassist Devin Wessels. “But it’s also the only thing that we really know how to do, and the only thing we want to do. And it’s a dream to be that far from home and people know who you are.”

Home, for Leavins, is the tiny East Texas town of Nederland, right across the border from Louisiana. As a kid in the early 2000s, he listened to everything from disco to Nineties hip-hop to punk. But as he got a little older, he gravitated more towards Eighties post-punk and new wave. “For me, that’s the beginning of alternative music,” he says. “Guitars became something different, and there was the invention of certain synths. It was an innovative time.”

Cable television was his window into a world far from Nederland. “I watched MTV, MTV2, even BET, and all those things,” he says. “The videos that would come on were the Strokes, Modest Mouse, and Arctic Monkeys. And I just loved that. It lit me up. It was this reality that some people had, and I knew that I’d like to be a part of it.”

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Leavins took a big step towards that dream in 2016, when he landed the part of Elvis Presley in the traveling production of the Broadway show Million Dollar Quartet, which is a fictional retelling of the legendary 1954 Sun City Records jam session between Presley, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, and Jerry Lee Lewis. 

“It was a nice opportunity to make some money and get out of where I was from in Texas,” he says. “Being in front of people every night for a year at that age, I realized that your voice is a muscle and there is a craft to this. It was constant dopamine to experience something new every night.”

The timing of all this was very fortuitous, since director Baz Luhrmann was in the early stages of planning his Presley biopic, Elvis, and didn’t yet know if he would land a lead actor capable of delivering the vocals. Veteran Nashville producer Dave Cobb — who has worked with everyone from Chris Stapleton and Sturgill Simpson to John Prine — became aware of Leavins because of Million Dollar Quartet, and thought he’d be perfect for the vocal role.  

This ultimately became moot, since Elvis lead actor Austin Butler proved quite capable of doing the job himself, but it still brought Cobb and Leavins together. “He was the first person who was successful and very involved in the industry that saw something in me,” says Leavins. “We had a lot in common, and we’d talk about the Cure and the Sundays and Cocteau Twins. I was just shocked to hear how eclectic his tastes are.”

By this point, Leavins had moved to Chicago, and he formed Brigitte Calls Me Baby after working on an under-the-radar solo record with Cobb in 2021. (The band name comes from an unlikely pen-pal relationship that Leavins developed with French actress Brigitte Bardot when he was a teenager.) They played their first gig at New York’s Mercury Lounge in the summer of 2022, and followed it up with a Lollapalooza afterparty back in Chicago where they shared a bill with Inhaler. Within weeks, they built up enough buzz from their high-energy live set and eclectic fusion of influences that they landed a spot opening for Muse at the 2,500-seat Riviera Theater. “That was mind-blowing because it was our fourth gig,” says Leavins. “But I didn’t feel any pressure. I just felt excited.”

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That excitement continued when they signed with ATO and went into the studio with Cobb to record their 2024 debut LP, The Future Is Our Way Out. Soon they were watching their debut single, “Impressively Average,” hit Number Nine on the Adult Alternative Airplay chart and score nearly 1.5 million plays on Spotify. They even opened for Morrissey at three European shows, including the singer’s hometown of Manchester, England. 

Leavins has been endlessly compared to Morrissey because of their similar singing voices. (He also styles his hair in a pompadour much like Moz circa 1985.) “My voice is particular, and I’ve known that since I was a teenager,” he says. “When I was younger, I wanted to sound like Victoria Legrand or Damon Albarn, but I don’t.” He ended up embracing the similarity: “When you hear Morrissey sing, you know it’s him. When you hear Jeff Buckley sing, you know it’s him. When you hear Alex Turner sing, you know it’s him. And so to live in any of those worlds in anyone’s mind is flattering to me.”

When they finally came face-to-face, Morrissey didn’t mind. “He was very warm to us, very welcoming, very funny,” says Leavins. “He did a lot for us, putting us on those shows and giving us that platform. I think some of that audience shows up to our gigs now.”

The group, which also features Jack Fluegel on guitar and Jeremy Benshish on drums, released their second LP, Irreversible, this March. “It’s different in so many ways,” says Wessels. “On the first record, we were finding ourselves. Wes came to us with a lot of these songs he had already written. They were great. But it was nice to go into the second record as a band. We sat down as a band and decided what we wanted this record to be. To have that intention and to have the luxury of time and be able to set a roadmap for ourselves … that made a huge difference.”

Their new single, “I Can Take the Sun Out of the Sky,” originated as a voice memo that Leavins and Wessels recorded in just a few minutes while waiting around to head off to an airport. “We had the song structured, arranged, and the bulk of what you hear on the recording track,” says Leavins. “We refined it over the course of maybe five days.”

The video shows a young woman flipping through a magazine where the members of the band appear and lyrics to the song appear on most every page, even in the ads. “It’s like a magazine where you can enter the world of the band,” says Leavins. “And we thought, ‘Well, it’d be kind of fun if we made this a magazine that’s sort of like the greatest of the most inventive critiques that we’ve ever gotten.'”

They welcome the critiques about their sound. “The worst thing we could do is run from that,” says Wessels. “Of course, we love great music, who wouldn’t? And we’re inspired endlessly by all sorts of different artists. And if people want to brand us a certain way, well, they’re welcome to do so, but it’s not all that bad.”

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