Mike Bankhead’s “Something That I Can’t Explain” doesn’t so much begin as it leaks out of the speakers, a humid, half-remembered confession that carries a feeling from basements, barroom carpets, and the ghost of every rehearsal space Dayton ever forced into existence. You don’t listen to this song so much as you wander into it, like opening the wrong door in a familiar house and finding a room you forgot was there. That’s Bankhead’s trick: he makes the local feel mythic and the mythic feel like it’s leaning against a busted amp, waiting for the others to arrive.
Dayton has always been one of America’s great under-credited noise factories, and yup, I am ready to die on that hill. We gave the world funk, post-punk, industrial weirdness, and enough basement-bred genius to stock a dozen glossy documentaries that will never get made. Mike Bankhead sits right in the middle of that lineage—not as a tourist or a revivalist, but as a lifer. He’s one of those musicians who doesn’t just play in a scene; he is part of its circulatory system, hauling gear, showing up for other people’s gigs, recording, mixing, encouraging, needling, and generally making sure the whole messy organism keeps breathing. Every scene needs someone like Mike, part fan, part musician, part reminder of the reasons people do this.
“Something That I Can’t Explain” sounds like it was written by someone who’s been around long enough to know that the best songs aren’t about clarity; they’re about staying with the confusion. Sometimes the grey area matters more than the easy answers. The melody lurches forward like it’s got something urgent to tell you and then second-guesses itself halfway through the sentence. The vocals don’t demand your attention—they sidle up to it, muttering truths they’re not totally sure they’re allowed to say. This is not stadium rock. This is backroom metaphysics.
What makes Bankhead essential to Dayton isn’t just that he writes songs like this; it’s that he’s helped create the conditions where songs like this can exist at all. Scenes don’t survive on big breaks. They survive on people who show up. Bankhead has been one of those gravitational figures who make it easier for others, strangers, and the less confident artists to take the leap. When someone tells you, “Yeah, Mike’s involved,” you know it means things will actually happen—records will get finished, shows will get booked, weird ideas will be taken seriously instead of laughed out of the room.
There’s a Dayton-specific emotional weather system in “Something That I Can’t Explain.” It’s in the way the song refuses to resolve cleanly, the way it keeps circling a feeling instead of pinning it down. Dayton’s a town that’s been promised a lot and delivered just enough to keep hoping. Bankhead understands that tension, and he doesn’t try to smooth it over. He lets it hum, like feedback you don’t quite know how to kill without losing the song.
Lester Bangs used to say that the best rock and roll made you feel less alone in your own weirdness. Bankhead does that, but he does it with a Dayton accent—gritty, affectionate, slightly suspicious of success, deeply loyal to the people who were there before anyone else cared. “Something That I Can’t Explain” isn’t just a song; it’s a little flare shot up from a city that keeps reinventing itself in basements and back rooms. And Mike Bankhead, bless him, keeps striking the matches.

