- Nashville four-piece The Sewing Club has signed with indie boutique agency Tour Peachy for live music representation in the United States.
- Agents Kyle Esbin, Lexi Zdanov, and Pat Schmitt will handle US booking duties.
- The band's debut album is set for Spring 2026 via Born Losers Records, following their well-received 2024 EP Care.
- EBB Music continues to represent the band across Europe and the UK.
Nashville grunge-pop four-piece The Sewing Club, comprised of Hannah McElroy, Stephen Meaux, Justin McKinney, and Zach McCoy, has officially signed with independent boutique agency Tour Peachy for US live music representation. Agents Kyle Esbin, Lexi Zdanov, and Pat Schmitt will oversee the band’s stateside booking.
Formed in 2022, the band built their reputation on a sound that draws from sparkly 90s rock and grunge, with hints of punk and Nashville indie.
Their 2024 debut EP Care, recorded with Calvin Lauber (Julien Baker), Alex Farrar (Wednesday), and Henry Stoehr (Slow Pulp), earned strong indie press, including praise from Paste Magazine. Their debut full-length is set for Spring 2026 via Born Losers Records.
The Sewing Club has already locked in a slot at the Left of the Dial Festival in Rotterdam this October, and appeared on the New Colossus Festival 2026 lineup in New York.
This signing continues Tour Peachy’s aggressive indie-rock roster expansion in 2026, the agency recently added Dear Cincinnati and Pleasure Systems under similar North American representation deals.
The Sewing Club retains separate European partners with EBB Music continuing to handle the band’s UK and European territory.
Takeaways
Tour Peachy is clearly building one of the more focused indie-rock rosters in the boutique agency space right now, and the Esbin-Zdanov-Schmitt team gives The Sewing Club real firepower heading into what could be a breakout album cycle.
With a debut LP dropping on Born Losers Records and European dates already locked through EBB Music, this is a band being set up to tour hard from both sides of the Atlantic simultaneously.
Does the Spring 2026 debut album put The Sewing Club on the path to headlining club runs, or are they still a year away from that next step? What does the split-territory model (Tour Peachy for US, EBB Music for EU/UK) tell us about how rising indie acts are thinking about international growth?