Reinvention rarely arrives on schedule. For Los Angeles band Rocket, it emerged from an unexpected collision of circumstance and necessity - a dancer's career-ending injury, a global pandemic, and a vintage mixing console discovered at a church garage sale.
Now, with the reissue of their debut EP' Versions of You' through Transgressive Records/Canvasback, Rocket stand at an intriguing intersection. Their music carries the weight of 90s alternative rock while remaining defiantly current, powered by a DIY ethos born not from aesthetic choice but pure pragmatism.
The band's origin story begins with vocalist and bassist Alithea Tuttle, whose path to music came through an abrupt detour when a promising career in dance and rhythmic gymnastics ended at age 16 due to a severe spinal injury. The pandemic provided an unexpected window for reinvention as she began exploring music with her boyfriend and future bandmate, guitarist Desi Scaglione.






