Sunday, November 20, 2022

NEW REVIEWS AND DEAD COMPUTER BLUES

 I'm pretty sure this will be the last batch of reviews I do this year (not counting the annual year end list) because I have too much damn stuff to do and keep up with.  Oh, and pour one out for my trusty 2009(I think) desktop as it limps to it's grave and I have to figure out an alternative replacement for anything graphically-related.  Heck, this header image I managed to do in Microsoft Word on my work laptop! And there's also just a bunch of other general life stressors, as well as trying to wrap up label releases for the year and look to 2023, so it's been kind of a hectic time. But somehow I'll manage I'm sure.  And a lot of that is through music.  So here's a handful of stuff coming in at the tail end of this weird year.  Enjoy!



-(16)-, “Into Dust”

I thought for sure there was some sort of lineup change between this record and the last full-length from this long-running Southern California stoner-sludge-hardcore band as there is a distinct difference in sound, particularly the vocals.  I know this band has a deep catalog, but for brevity’s sake, let’s start with “Dream Squasher”, their previous excellent, menacing, super-fucking-heavy long player.  That record just sounds ridiculously heavy and mean.  “Into Dust” is the newest effort, and just about 2 years removed from “Dream Squasher”.  Where that record, from a vocal stance, focused on the screamed, evil-sounding hardcore roar with the occasional foray into a sung part, mostly as just background “Into Dust” makes the more melodic vocals almost the center of the band.  Now, the membership from the last record to this one has not changed one bit (and this is a band that has had quite a few members over the years).  They put a great deal of emphasis here on the metal side, leaning into some definite Crowbar parts between the sludge, melodic metal, and sung vocals.  For some people that works great.  For me I prefer this band when they’re just laying into a groove and plowing down anything in their way between metallic hardcore and absolutely crushing sludge riffs.  There’s still riffs a plenty here, not to mention some dives into their more hardcore side (check “Lane Splitter” for proof on that), so you know they haven’t forgotten what bakes the bread.  But I’m not really feeling those sing-y, wanky groove metal bro parts that seem to creep in way more than I’d like.  I’d just suggest skipping most of “Dressed Up To Get Messed Up”.  But they do close out with a song way out of their comfort zone (in parts) with “Born On a Barstool” and it’s an example of trying something different and doing it pretty well. (Relapse)

 

A.M. NICE, “Half Past Tense”

When you see the name perhaps visions of a sunny retirement community, in the morning just after changing out the attends and having a good ‘ol cup of Metamucil before heading over to the rec center to watch the pre-lunch magic show, whilst humming along to some old timey crooner is in your head.  No?  Just me?  Well, A.M. Nice is a band that certainly sounds nice and I suppose listening to them in the A.M. would help add a cheery disposition to start out the day for sure.  A.M. Nice do not make harsh music.  They create the sort of indie rock, rooted in some punk ideas, that adorned the pages of Punk Planet and represented hard in the late 90’s via labels like Jade Tree, Southern, and Caulfield Records.  Their jangly rock is somewhere between post-punk, a bit of mod rock, and a dollop of Midwest emo.  Most everything moves at a decent clip, most of the songs are direct and to the point.  It isn’t until halfway through on “Your War” where they kick it up a notch, increase the tempo, and toss out a 80 second ripper before getting back to their regular programming.  It’s nothing that’s going to blow your hair back, but it’s a fun listening experience that you just can’t be mad at.  Pleasant, not-very-confrontational, and enjoyable. (Phratry Records)

 

BLACKLISTERS, “Leisure Centre” EP

Godamn you Blacklisters for only giving us four new songs, fucking tease.  You can take your Idles, your Part Chimp, and whatever other ‘well-known’ British noise heavies and toss them into the Thames because Blacklisters basically makes them all sound like the theme to Teletubbies.  So this band has always sounded wild and fucked up in the best way possible, scattering howled drunken vocals over clattering guitar feedback and noise, but they have always had this incredible low-end rhythm that not only keeps things together, but generally sounds frightening while getting your body shaking.  Everything is chunky, dirty, and mean, yet so bright and vicious all at once always making for an exceptionally entertaining listen.  And leave it to these smarmy bastards to add some significant saxophone skronk to half the tracks, including what more or less amounts to a saxophone breakdown at the end of “The Wrong Way Home”.  It’s just another layer of insanity on top of the already caustic music.  I friggin’ love this band and if this is any indication of what’s to come I’m even more excited.  More sax skronk!  More lumbering bass!  More wild guitar feedback! (Exploding InSound)

 

BOTHERS, “II”

It’s been awhile since Portland’s Bothers surfaced.  Apparently, this record was finished nearly two years ago and in that time the members of this formidable punk band started other bands (that kind of sound a bit like Bothers), and then quickly dropped this one on listeners.  In all honesty, I thought they had broken up.  But nope, they were just hibernating.  So where I felt like the bands first LP was fast and dirty punk mixed with some of the guitar-pedal love of 90’s post-hardcore this record seems just a little slower.  But, like, just a little.  And it really does sound a great deal like members previous outfits (Glass and Ashes and Young Livers most notably), which is not altogether a bad thing.  Maybe make it just a little darker and harsh overall.  When a songwriter(s) have a certain style it can be difficult to escape it.  I don’t think these guys are trying to re-invent the punk/hardcore wheel by any means or alter the type of music they’ve created in the past, I think they’re primarily playing to their strengths which they show off on this second record.  And they do it well.  Now they need to get out of hibernation mode for real and play some more shows. (Dirt Cult Records)

 

FULL OF HELL, “Aurora Leaking From An Open Wound” 7”

I had no idea this was a thing that existed either, but apparently the band pressed this 7” themselves and only had it on their recent European tour.  But not to deny the rest of the world you can get the digital version and keep up with all things Full Of Hell.  Honestly, I’m waaaaay into this.  Full Of Hell has grabbed my attention more and more with each release as they deftly weave in and out of various extreme style of harsh music.  Their last couple releases threw grindcore, death metal, noise rock, and crusty hardcore into a blender and made it all work naturally.  On this 7” all three tracks move a little slower, do great stuff with sludgy metal and noise rock and a bit of Converge, and then even throw in a nice bit of saxophone on “Blinding Erasure”.  I, for one, would love to see them continue in this direction.  But you know they’re just going to keep throwing whatever the fuck they feel like at audiences and convincing everyone all this weird shit together makes total sense.  They’re great at doing that.  I highly recommend this little slice of extremity. (self-released)

 

RADIATION RISKS, “Welcome To Bad Boy City” 7”

A number of years ago this band jumped on a show they totally did not at all fit on, but they managed to pretty much blow away most of the other bands on the bill.  I was familiar with the cats in this band, but not their band.  They all showed up looking like a mix of extras from “Decline Of Western Civilization” and Dr. Teeth and Electric Mayhem…  and that’s what it sort of sounded like if you combined those two.  Think super short, fast punk songs with clean guitar, and wild saxophone and organ.  And I don’t mean that in some sort of chaotic, avant-garde highbrow mess.  I mean all their stuff had a classic wild punk feel, every song sounded like a 90-second party.  I kind of lost track of this particular endeavor, but I guess they ended up touring quite a bit and are now finished.  However, before calling it a day the band decided to lay down their last 7 songs (in all of 11 minutes) and had the one and only Mike Tommyrot draw up an absolutely sick cover and threw it all on a 7”.  Sadly, this release is lacking the sax and organ, which definitely takes away a bit from the fun, but I’m always impressed by what these creative folks do, whatever band it may be.  From the wild minds behind bands like Alpha Hopper, Science Man, I Object, and Brown Sugar so you know it’s got some flavor.  I’d start with their full length “Strawberry Quick” and go from there. (SwimmingFaith/ Feral Kid)

 

SEAXES/ IRON LININGS, “Die Twice” split 12”

Pairing up a couple of Midwest’s newer, yet already very promising, bands this split expresses a couple different sides of loud and abrasive rock music.  Seaxes are a noise rock band from Chicago so Jesus Lizard are inevitable.  And like those legends Seaxes use taut, tight rhythms while still going completely off the rails with their crazy sound.  Things only heat up as their side moves along with the last two tracks- “Ball Peen” and “Sand” taking the cake for most adventurous and wild tracks, the latter careening towards a violent horizon as it closes out with nauseating slide guitar across what sounds like a never-ending fretboard.  Iron Linings hail from St. Louis and follow up with five new tracks after a really awesome demo earlier this year.  They lay down a thick and lumbering groove (which lends itself to some truly pulverizing chunky sections here and there) throughout that recalls regional contemporaries such as Bummer and Nerver, while adding a bit of that Midwest melodic flavor that I can’t exactly pin down.  But I know it when I hear it where they’re exploring the roots of some of that area’s heavy alternative scene from the 90’s betwixt their big riffs. (The Ghost Is Clear)

 

SWEET COBRA, “Threes”

This record has been sitting on a shelf for a couple years as the world got weird and finally, it’s out there for all to enjoy and I couldn’t be happier.  Sweet Cobra has always been an impressive band.  They’ve been at it for a long time and I initially got into them due to the members previous (well for awhile, coinciding) band Suicide Note.  Sweet Cobra ply a similar trade in that they’re a ‘heavy’ band that completely fuck with the concept of what they’re supposed to be.  Sure, they started out a lot sludgier, and from a punk background.  Over the years they have tried their hand at various songwriting styles and I think things truly peaked on their last full length, “Earth”, which moved in a lot of different directions yet remained exciting, vibrant, and energetic throughout.  On “Threes” there seems to be a decidedly overall more chill vibe with an emphasis on the studio and recording versus just how ass-kicking something will sound live.  And there’s no shortage of names handling the recording and mixing duties from Matt Talbot (Hum), Alan Epley (Shiner), and Kurt Ballou (God City/Converge).  So yeah, it sounds great.  While opener “Coats” is a faster, rhythm-oriented rocker and “Least Worst” stomps around, and “Melted” quickens the pace even more it’s tracks like “Cave” and the poppy meditation of “Bring Them Water”, or the ballad-esque “Alive On Arrival” that show the band taking their time with things and laying some focus on the vocals and harmonies and it all sounds pretty great.  There’s a bit of a Queens Of the Stone Age, “Songs For the Deaf” sound between the thick bass and vocals, minus a bit of the boogie and cocaine, but I like to think Sweet Cobra is their own thing more than ever these days.  They may not be nearly as active as they were years ago, what with members other obligations with Cloakroom and adult lives going on, but I’d love to be able to see these dudes again on a stage and hear some of these songs.  This is a great addition to their catalog and if you haven’t ever heard them give this and “Earth” a spin.  (Hawthorne StreetRecords)

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