Sunday, October 27, 2019

TRICK OR TREAT? TREATS! BECAUSE THEY'RE REVIEWS.


BOTHERS, s/t
These dudes play really fast.  As far as no-frills punk rock goes this is just what I’m into.  Imagine Hot Snakes playing shorter, faster, dirtier, and spit-frothing vocals instead of a raspy howl.  Bothers, from right here in Portland, OR are a fairly new band but wasted no time in blasting forth with this hot shit record.  They break out 10 songs in probably all of about 20 minutes and it’s that long in part because mid-record jammer “No Trust” takes up 5 of those minutes.  It’s a nice break from all the speed and puts forth another angle to the band, churning out some slower, strangely melodic vitriol and is possibly the best song on the whole record.  That nod to noisy-melodic anthem-jamming shows up on “Claw To Bone” and album closer “Deader Ends” as well.  The rest you need to strap yourself in…  or, you know, fuck it, just get loose and spazz the fuck out.  That’s kind of what this music is meant to have you do.  Thoroughly enjoyable and a heck of a debut.  (Dirt Cult Records)


CANDY, “Super Stare” 7”
From out of nowhere comes new material from Candy, one of the gnarliest and downright vicious newer hardcore bands out there.  This is in preparation for a new LP and I can only assume both these songs may end up on it.  But who cares, they’re two of the best songs they have written.  Candy seamlessly meld dirty, mosh-y hardcore with doses of Japanese –style d-beat, noisy samples, and some Integrity guitar solo worship.  And for those who love their completely off-brand design style this is another record cover that’s about as ugly as they come.  The casual observer may believe this to be a nu-metal band providing soundtrack music for a dystopian video game. But no, it’s Candy and they fucking rip.  So get moshed into oblivion for the title track, stick around for the quick ripper “Win Free Love” on the B-side.  If you live count your days until the new LP rolls around, or until Candy says die.  (Relapse)


DAUGHTERS OF SAINT CRISPIN, s/t
These dudes play really slow. It’s like Jesu with more jangly guitars, or Young Widows on “In and Out Of Youth and Lightness” minus as many effects and more growled vocals.  The band uses a drum machine, but it’s tough to tell (from my perspective), so props to having a good drum sound. A couple of the songs are fairly long and add to the moody nature of the music and the whole thing sounds like it was recorded in a big, empty, sad warehouse.  If you want to feel down and mope around like a sad bastard this might do the trick.  It’s a bit too morose for me, but maybe I’m just hoping for a little more dynamic from song to song to keep it from getting too repetitive.  (self-released)


DRUGS OF FAITH, “Decay” 7”
Drugs Of Faith is a super-dependable, albeit infrequent, band out of Northern Virginia.  By this I mean they only emerge every couple years or so to release music and don’t play out all that often.  However, every time they do something it’s a guarantee it’s going to destroy.  This is no exception.  5 new songs (one of which is an intro) of face-crushing punk-rock n’ roll- grind.  This isn’t quite as heavy as previous releases and maybe that’s simply because it has a nicer recording and there’s an occasional cleaner guitar break (like on “Anonymity”), but that’s not really saying much because Drugs Of Faith still sound relentless.  Really, you can start anywhere in their catalog and get consistently solid releases.  They maintain a seemless mesh of faster, aggressive and metallic grind, with a punk attitude, and some bad-add rock riffs.  I fail to see anything wrong with any of this.  Get into Drugs Of Faith now.  (Selfmadegod)


DEN, “Iron Desert”
I feel like this record is one of those releases where the cover is rather indicative of the music.  Like, you start listening to it and as you take another bog hit, and dust the resin off the cover, staring into it like it’s some sort of Magic Eye trick, you think to yourself, ‘yeeeeah, this makes sense.’  Den, a trio out of Chicago, are a vortex where sludge, psychedelia, and sci-fi converge into a weird mosaic of sound.  Just based on that last sentence I know what you’re thinking and the answer is, ‘no, I do not do drugs.’  But I imagine Den indulge in copious amounts of them and that’s why they make the music that they do.  And I’m cool with it.  There are some sections that get a little too far-out into psych for me, but when they hit their heavier riffs they’re realllllly good riffs and very heavy.  Did I mention they don’t use guitar either?  Just drums, really distorted bass, and some very distorted and heavy synths.  And burly vocals too.  Sure, you’re thinking ‘synths can’t be heavy’.  OK, square.  Give a listen to the closing title track and let me know when you’re able to reattach your face.  So while all of “Iron Desert” doesn’t transport me to the riff-filled land, enough of it does in that I feel like I’ve enjoyed the ride.  (Corpse Flower)


LACING, “Without”
For fans of bands that have pedalboards the size of your kitchen table and like to sing in hushed, breezy tones.  At this point I have heard a lot of bands that do the atmospheric-to-somewhat-heavy shoegaze thing and Lacing are certainly a band of that ilk that do so quite well.  I’d say this album is a little on the long side and maybe having four different interludes of playing with every possible guitar pedal that wasn’t used on other songs might be a little much, but when they get down to it it’s pretty enjoyable.  There are several tracks which err on the more loose and lush side that can be a little hard to follow insofar as how atmospheric they sound.  I suppose I’m more a fan of when bands such as this lean on riffs to complement their MBV worship, as Lacing emphasize a bit more later in the album with a couple upbeat songs (including an album closer that sounds almost out of place, and totally like Smashing Pumpkins, “Geek USA" but comes off as so energetic that I don’t really care), but there’s enough hooks to go with their spacey moments to keep any fan of this style thoroughly entertained.  (Handstand Records


PROCESS BLACK, “Countdown Failure” 7”
There was a blip about this project a couple years back, which I’m guessing is relegated to just being a studio band, but now it’s a little more real.  I also think, at the time, most of the material on this 7” was up online and then taken down not long after.  It feels familiar to me.  Either way, this group features the vocals of Tim Singer, one of my favorite vocalists ever (Deadguy, Kiss It Goodbye, No Escape), being 100% Tim Singer as well as Aaron Edge (every Northwest band ever in the last 25 years) handling all the bass and guitars, and a drummer I have zero knowledge of.  The first song carries a super heavy Unsane vibe to it in both guitar tone, excessive feedback, and general pissed-off-ness.  It gets a little slower after that, but just as mean and grouchy.  I do like my grouchy mean music and Process Black does the trick, even if it’s just three songs that were sort of already released a couple years ago.  I am, however, just pleased to have it on physical format to play loud and annoy others.  Mean music as played by lifer punk dudes and design nerds.  My kind of folk.  (Deathwish Inc)


SALVATION, “Year Of the Fly”
On their new LP Chicago noise rock trio Salvation channel Jesus Lizard at their most unhinged and free-wheeling, while also giving a big nod to Nirvana “In Utero” in regards to it’s most ham-fisted moments.  At least on the first half of the record anyway.  By the midway point a couple completely out-of-place pieces emerge which almost made me wonder if another band had been shoehorned into the record by accident- one a short piano interlude, the other an acoustic ballad called “Failure”.  It kind of gets a bit more dark from there, even dare I say, a bit sketchy.  But when you kick things off with a song called “Dark and Stormy” I suppose it’s expected that things might get rough.  The record closes out with another brief instrumental that sounds like closing time at a funk-themed dive bar from the 70’s.  It’s a rather mixed bag from Salvation, but a welcome range of heavy and wild to calm and strange.  It’s worth a go.  (Forge Again Records)

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