Wednesday, May 15, 2019

REVIEWS TO GET YOU AN EARLY START ON SUMMER

I feel like it's been sort of a slow year in terms of stuff that's really kicking my ass, but that's changing with some of the releases that have just come around.  But maybe I'm out of the loop.  I have been a little preoccupied with putting out a bunch of records (seriously, get those Great Falls/Great Sabatini splits, the Funeral discography, and that new one from USA Nails already!) and went out on a little tour with Dialysis in the Northwest after a couple Northeast shows...  so I've been busy to say the least.
But I'm making time for you, the reader, to fill your eyes with words, and expose your ears to sounds that clearly you never asked for.  I do it because I care.

AUSTERITY PROGRAM, THE, “Bible Songs 1” EP
Every few years the duo known as The Austerity Program emerges from their dad caves and decides to unleash more fresh hell upon the dozens of fans they have across the world in the form of total Big Black worship and absolutely perfectionist tones.  The pair scrutinize every iota of sound they write and record and dial in their drum machine so accurately it takes a team of NASA scientists to check their work for any hint of error (maybe that’s why it takes them awhile to put out new records?).  This new batch, “Bible Songs 1” is six tracks of punishing industrial (and by that I mean they use a drum machine that sounds like a drum machine)/noise rock bile.  With mountains of guitar cabs, aluminum neck guitars, and computers at their disposal they begin the record by lurching through the slow plod of “Isaiah 63: 2-6” before blasting into the freak-ish death ride of “Ezekiel 39: 17-20”.  Things come to a head on “Numbers 31: 13-18” (if you haven’t guessed, all the songs are named after Bible passages) with it’s tweaking jittery vocals/guitar intro that breaks into some crazy squealing/samples before closing with some apocalyptic crushing destruction.  It doesn’t get much weirder and uncomfortable than that but the last two tracks certainly try.  The band has a number of releases under their belt at this point, all of which pine similar territory, and pine it well they do.  This is a perfectly good place to start if you’re unfamiliar (Controlled Burn)
 

EX-HEX, “It’s Real”
It’s been about 5 years I think since Ex-Hex dropped their debut LP “Rips”.  In that time they toured a bunch, then laid dormant while bassist (now second guitarist?) Betsy Wright did some work with her similar-sounding duo Bat Fangs, and now here we are with “It’s Real” and it’s a worthy follow up.  Total bad-ass catchy rock n’ roll happening here.  To give a visual idea of what their music sounds like the group has a live backdrop consisting of a silver curtain with a giant, real-deal neon ‘EX HEX’ sign behind them.  Add some fog machine and Judas Priest t-shirts and let your imagination do the rest.  Or you could just listen to their records.  As opposed to their debut it feels like primary vocalist/guitarist Mary Timony is sharing the vocals and leads more with Wright on this one.  They have also transformed into a 4-piece in the live setting, whereas before they were a trio (though it seems they mostly continue as a trio on record).  Fans of 80’s bands like early Pretenders, Runaways, Cheap Trick take note, which may not mean much to regular readers here, but that’s why I’m mentioning.  Expand your frickin’ horizons.  It may show up early on in the record but “Rainbow Shiner” is the official badass jam of the summer, especially if you’re planning on getting into trouble.  (Merge)


FULL OF HELL, “Weeping Choir”
I am by no means an authority on this band and their voluminous output.  I’ve listened to random releases from them over the years, but never delved deep into their material.  However, I know they’ve always played around with various extreme subgenres and this record is no exception.  Somehow they manage to make powerviolence, death metal, grindcore, power electronics, and even a little black metal blend seamlessly into one ridiculously aggressive stew and it works.  And in 26 short minutes (one of the songs is nearly 7 minutes long) they cram all that business into 11 tracks and about 10,000 blast beats.  Some of it feels a little throwaway to me- “Rainbow Coil” is essentially three minutes of junk falling down a staircase recorded through Radio Shack mics, but it ends with a machine gun-like industrial beat that connects into “Aria Of Jeweled Tears”, one of the most blastingly satisfying tracks on the whole record that also closes with those same industrial machine gun repetitions. “Angels Gather Here” more successfully blends that mixture of noise, industrial, and doom-y sludge into a whopper of an end-of-the-world style melee.  But for my money, I guess the more straightforward death metal approach of “Thundering Hammers” is the safe bet insofar as the likelihood of maniacs beating the pulp out of one another being in the 100% range.  Is this a worthy follow up to their multitude of other releases?  You be the judge of that.  As someone giving them some undivided attention for the first time, as opposed to cursory listens, I’d say it’s pretty tight and does a great job of mashing various influences together in a way that somehow makes sense among the chaos.  (Relapse)


HELMS ALEE, “Noctiluca”
At this point Helms Alee are totally their own thing.  Not much has changed with their sound, but they’re incredibly consistent at delivering really good records filled with equal parts huge, powerful sludge and harmonized weird melodies.  I’m partial to the creepy, chunky thud of “Beat Up”, while “Be Rad Tomorrow” focuses on big, swirling bliss.  I suppose the band continues to make strides towards building riffs and songs around their individual voices (all three members take turns singing, sometimes separately, sometimes in unison), as opposed to throwing down a massive riff and adding vocals on top of it.  So in that respect their songwriting takes on more angles and dimensions, which are already pretty unique to begin with.  Helms Alee have always had a wonderful way of taking creepy, serpentine melodies and making them beautiful and super heavy at the same time.  While those gargantuan riffs from ultra-loud amps still exist it feels as if the band isn’t out to prove anything anymore with just how loud and distorted they can get because, well, you already know it.  So while “Noctiluca” isn’t anything new for the Helms Alee trio it’s a perfectly fine addition to their already stellar catalog.  (Sargent House)


LOW DOSE, s/t
Listening to the debut from Philly’s Low Dose is a bit of a mixed bag.  It opens and closes with heart wrenching ballads, and what’s crammed in-between is a feast of wild, chaotic noise rock.  Low Dose is made up of all of Fight Amp (who split up a couple years ago), plus vocalist/guitarist Itarya Rosenberg, previously of the way-too-short-lived Legendary Divorce.  So a lot of this sounds like someone else singing Fight Amp songs, or Legendary Divorce songs that never got their proper due.  To fresh ears it works, but having been very familiar with all parties involved and their previous endeavors there’s some clear distinctions over who was probably writing what parts.  Whatever the case, after having those heartstrings pulled, you get a couple of rippers in the form of “Right On” and “For Sure” to tear the rest of them out and put them through a meat grinder. “Away” lurches through a Jesus Lizard-esque dirge with Rosenburg screaming her guts out.  But I think “Otherworldly Motives” is the most interesting song on the record because it sounds like any of the members previous outfits really and acts as sort of mid-point coda/anthem (even though it falls later on in the record), and really emphasizes the vocals over the beefy riffs that beat you over the head on most of the record.  It’s a twist that I hope the group takes some inspiration from going forward.  All in all it’s a solid debut that certainly pays tribute to what the individuals here have done in the past, and I certainly hope they continue to grow going forward.  (Knife Hits/ Brutal Panda)


MANDATE OF HEAVEN, “Least Concern”
In the top slot for ‘band that should have been huge but never quite made it’ category Mandate Of Heaven will win each time.  The prime musical outlet for Syracuse stalwart Greg Pier, and backed by a cast of various people over the last 15 plus years, but most often by solid-beyond-solid drummer Bob Kane and Chuck Gwynn on the thunderous, yet study, low end, has released a treasure trove of albums pretty much all self-released.  While the output was more prolific years ago life, kids, jobs, and other adult matters have kept the group from creating a new full length in almost five years.  But here we are in 2019 and “Least Concern” is easily one of the best efforts Mandate Of Heaven has ever released.  It’s hard to nail down the MofH sound exactly outside of it just being really good rock music.  When they’re more aggressive it translates to an early 90’s grungy Northwest sound, like album opener “County Seat Syndrome”, which might be one of the ‘heaviest’ songs the band has made since way back in the “Real Devil Music” days.  But often, Mandate create slower songs that can flow between wistful stoner rock to breezy, beautiful ballads.  “Double Negative” goes in that sort of slower, kinda heavy direction while “Hey Headbanger” takes another MofH twist into melodic, yet sardonic and wry wit about having to suffer through heavy metal cover bands as the only outlet in town that people consistently plop down money to see (it’s true).  But I want to discuss the mid-way highlights on this record, two songs which I feel are some of the best material they have ever done.  Starting with “Human Ashtray” (another rally against the dumpiness and depression that can emerge from Syracuse and it’s chorus of “You’re just another human ashtray, dying on the North side.”) and it’s alternating from slow to mid-tempo it has a strong Jason Farrell (Swiz, Bluetip, Retisonic, Red Hare) vibe in terms of the guitar lead and overall feel for the first half.  It’s just a great song.  Next is “Nummenuff”, one of the prettiest ballads the band has ever created.  It moves slowly and breezily and meanders into one of the best damn bridges ever as Pier almost whispers the lyrics and into a sort of Zeppelin-esque kind of solo.  I mean, just sit out in a park, or take a walk through a field on a really nice day and listen to this song.  You’ll understand.  The album closes with a couple rippers- “Turned Table” (a speedy song carried by a heavyweight bass tone) and “Who Comes At Night To Steal” (if tuned a couple steps lower it could be a Torche B-side).  I’d say the only track on this whole record I’m not totally feeling is “Shutdown Man” just because it runs pretty long and it’s not even a bad song.  Honestly, if you want one of the best rock records you’ll hear all year this is a worthy contender.  (Neon Witch)


PILE, “Green and Grey”
Six albums into their career and Pile finally does a double LP.  Although, to be fair, I doubt they were intent on making a double LP.  I’m guessing the run time ran just a couple minutes long of what would fit on a regular LP.  That’s really not important though.  This is really the first Pile record to feature some new musicians ever since there was a band to go along with ringleader Rick Maguire’s musical project.  Touring guitarist Chappy Hull (of the wildly complicated Gnarwhal) has officially joined up and long time bassist Matt Connery has left the fold.  However, the foundation of primary songwriter/guitarist/vocalist Rick Maguire and drummer Kris Kuss remains to make a Pile album that still definitively sounds like Pile.  And just like every other Pile record out there it’s impossible to pin down exactly what they sound like because no one quite sounds like them, and it’s very good.  I hate to state, though, it’s really tough for them to top what I feel was a near perfect record on their last outing “Hairshirt of Purpose.”  “Green and Grey” feels a bit more esoteric and meandering in a lot of places, both musically and lyrically and takes several listens to really sink in.  “Bruxist Grin” is an excellent song that may be the closest thing to a direct 4/4 style stomper, while “The Soft Hands Of Stephen Miller” creates no mysteries about the nature of it’s lyrics and “My Employer” is a pretty frank declaration of how being a working musician on the road can sever relationships.  The rest though?  I really like it.  It’s just a lot to take in, both in the back-and-forth with the band bouncing off Maguire’s unique sing-drawl, shifting the melodies of the music to his timbre and the more aggressive tendencies where they are coming at you fast, hard, and shouting (“On a Bigger Screen”).  I don’t tend to label Pile as a band that mixes politics in their music, but it feels as if there are more than a few songs on this that indirectly nod towards a feeling of unease and outright disgust in America post-2016.  But maybe I’m reading too deep into their stuff.  Either way, as a long time Pile fan this is certainly a worthy addition to their catalog.  But if you’re just wading these waters and are looking for a record to start off with may I suggest either “Dripping” or “Hairshirt Of Purpose”.  This one’s a little more labyrinthe than others.  (Exploding In Sound)


RINGWORM, “Death Becomes My Voice”
Ringworm just slowly gets more metal with each release.  They were already pretty metal to begin with, but this just moves the needle a little further into just saying ‘fuck it’ to retaining a semblance of being a hardcore band.  If you have always liked Ringworm you won’t be disappointed because they are a band that generally remains consistent.  Human Furnace still sounds just as pissed as ever and the rest of the band is firing on all cylinders to make for a well-seasoned metal record.  I sort of feel like a band such as this is a little too ‘safe’ for Relapse, who tend to deal with a wide variety of extreme bands, but each are generally pushing the envelope in their respective sound.  Nothing against Ringworm, but they’re not really pushing things in any new sort of direction.  They just remain as heavy and (slightly more) metal as ever.  So yeah, you can’t go wrong with them if you liked them before, just don’t expect as many breakdowns.  (Relapse)

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