Anyway, here's a new track from that 7" revolving around a bunch of good stuff about Syracuse, NY. If you're not from here, that's OK. You can google the references. If you're from Syracuse, act like ya know. Check this lyric video:
Tuesday, July 28, 2015
NEW DIALYSIS SONG WITH LYRICS POSTED!
At the end of Summer DIALYSIS will unleash their new 11-song 7" "Abastab". It may as well be an album there's so many songs.
Anyway, here's a new track from that 7" revolving around a bunch of good stuff about Syracuse, NY. If you're not from here, that's OK. You can google the references. If you're from Syracuse, act like ya know. Check this lyric video:
Anyway, here's a new track from that 7" revolving around a bunch of good stuff about Syracuse, NY. If you're not from here, that's OK. You can google the references. If you're from Syracuse, act like ya know. Check this lyric video:
Sunday, July 12, 2015
HOT REVIEWS FOR JULY!
Ooh yeah, read opinions about records, that should get anyone's motor revving. Not really. Instead, just read this stuff and maybe buy these records. There's a lot of activity around the Hexquarters, and plenty of big news to come in the very near future, so best I squeeze these in here before a flood of other new stuff pops up.
COLISEUM, “Anxiety’s Kiss”
Having seen this band since they began I feel like their
trajectory got more aggressive with each release, peaking at “No Salvation”
before they took a decidedly different turn into post-punk (and I guess
post-hardcore) territory with “House With a Curse” (which still remains my
overall favorite Coliseum record in their fairly large catalog), and began to
get less bluntly aggressive with each release. But that’s the trick that makes them such a wonderful band- they
still write incredibly aggressive and confrontational music, just with a
decidedly more melodic and experimental bent these days. I mean, the first two tracks on
“Anxiety’s Kiss”- “We Are the Water” and “Course Correction”- are some of the
strongest material the band has ever written, both lyrically and
musically. “We Are the Water”, a
unity rally delivered with driving bass, pulsing synth, and anthemic riffs
culled from years of listening to Dischord Records is the perfect opener. “Course Correction” is more in line
with Coliseum of old, a raging hardcore dig at the one percent and burning down
banks. But there is change, and it
is good. The band has introduced
minor synth accompaniment on almost every song here, mostly as a textural
addition, and hardly dominating any given song (although A-side closer “Dark
Light Of Seduction” ends with a diminishing synth loop that goes into a locked
groove, just so you know it’s there.
“Comedown” utilizes this more electronic aspect to great effect as a
pulsating background for the entire song to make it feel like some futuristic
dystopian car chase movie soundtrack.
It’s one of the best songs on here. “Driver At Dusk” is a slow and methodical track that recalls
first LP Tortoise in its spatial meandering and spoken vocals of driving
through the night, stark and beautiful.
The album closes with the thumping post-hardcore bliss of “Escape Yr
Skull”, a loud and bouncy track that ends things on a note uncommon for
Coliseum… but that’s the
point. Move forward, try new
things, and somehow still be that same band that has been doing great things
for years. Yeah, this might not be
my favorite Coliseum record of them all, but there’s a pretty good chance that
could change by year’s end.
(Deathwish)
CREEPOID, “Cemetery High Rise Slum”
Am I just getting used to what Creepoid blew my mind with a
few years ago so that each new release isn’t hitting me as hard, or does this
record just sound like a straight continuation of their last self-titled
LP? Like, there’s no progression,
or maturity, it feels like the self-titled got released and they just kept
writing. That’s not necessarily a
bad thing, because that was a good record. So, by default, that makes this a good record as well. Yet I feel on their debut, “Horse
Heaven”, not only was there a strong variety in the types of songs they did and
a lot more distinct variation within many of the songs doing a loud-quiet-loud
thing that I found to be quite exciting.
The songs on “Cemetery High Rise Slum” feel like one big swirling
psychedelic haze of dreamy vocals, rocking tempos, and fuzzed-out guitar
wails. There is a soft-side to all
their noise that is countered with an underlying sort of looming Manson family
type of drugged-out terror, just waiting to be unleashed. The sadist in me sort of wants more of
that cheap-drug freak-out bleeding walls mania. It’s a damn good record, but that sort of live insanity this
band produces (seriously, go see them) doesn’t come off as strong as I was
hoping on this one. (Collect Records)
FAILURE, “The Heart Is a Monster”
This album is a monster. At 18 tracks (6 of which are segues) and over an hour of
music it’s a lot to take in. You
basically get one song for every year that Failure has been out of
commission. They had a lot of time
to come up with a lot of stuff, so I guess you will have to forgive them for
making this record a little lengthy.
I never quite picked up on this band, having heard their name thrown
about in their heyday, lazily checking out a couple of their albums
half-attentively, and then sort of dismissing it as good, but not really
anything I’d put on constant rotation.
They were relegated as a footnote in the back of my mind while scores of
other bands took cues from what they did and paid deep homage (Cave-In most
notably, The Life and Times/Shiner most assuredly- even though they existed in
similar times). All in all I knew
what I was probably getting and I’m happy with what I hear. There are certainly some very strong
tracks here, ones that I find myself humming after only a couple listens, and
then there are all the segues, which feel a bit unnecessary. For long time fans of the group rejoice
for it hath arrived. For the
passive fan such as myself consider it a good slab of thoroughly thought-out,
and expertly executed space rock that can be enjoyed by pretty much
anyone. (INgrooves)
FIGHT AMP, “Constantly Off”
Long-running Philly scum rockers Fight Amp pull a hat trick
out of their ass and strike back with an EP (they call it an LP, but it’s six
songs in 18 minutes) that pretty much rules. I gotta admit I wasn’t too swayed with their last full
length, “Birth Control”. Sure, it
did the trick of being a solid noise rock outing, but nothing on it really
stuck with me. At least this keeps
things pretty short and sweet and has a barrage of riffs raining down on
you. Not only does “I Perceive
Reptoids” have the best title on the record, it’s probably the best track here
with it’s lumbering sort of catchiness (in it’s own sludgy and filthy way). If you want to roll with some Melvins
type stuff, but less stop-and-go and pretty much all go Fight Amp, and this
record in particular, is a pretty good way to roll. (Brutal Panda)
SELF DEFENSE FAMILY, “Heaven Is Earth”
Self Defense Family keep things interesting because they
always take an approach to what they do without the slightest bit of concern as
to what others think, and they generally do a very good job of presenting it
successfully. They write and
record constantly. Most of the
songs on this record fit in with how they have been writing music for the last
couple years- a combination of Lungfish’s repetitive ragas, hazy atmospheric
drones of melody and spoken word-style vocals, and a few upbeat songs scattered
throughout. So in one respect it’s
not terribly out of line with what SDF has been doing. In other respects they try some new
things- recording at multiple studios for one record (not really noticeable in
the overall sound), throwing in some piano and harmonica into songs, and some
different approaches to vocals. As
always, the lyrics are fascinating to read, filled with clever snark and great
wordplay (such as the catchy and upbeat “Everybody Wants a Prize”), or heavy
bombast (as on “Talia”, easily the record’s strongest song and possibly in the
top five songs the band has ever written). It’s a relatively succinct record though, when compared to
last year’s “Try Me”, a sprawling double LP complete with an interview that
took up two of those sides. At
eight songs and roughly 26 minutes “Heaven Is Earth” is not going for any
conceptual landmarks, but it does the job of showcasing a band right where
they’re at right now. Who am I
kidding, they probably have a dozen more 7”s in the can awaiting pressing from
some label that doesn’t exist yet.
They probably don’t even play these songs live anymore because they’re
already onto the next thing.
(Deathwish)
SPRAYPAINT, “Punters On the Barge”
Spray Paint don’t really change, so much as they just get
better at what they’ve been doing since they began. This being their fourth LP in as many years the band is no
doubt prolific, even though each album gets shorter and shorter (“Rodeo Songs”
was a full-on 15 tracks, which last years “Clean Blood, Regular Acid” was a
respectable 12, and this new one 10 quick blasts). They’ve gotten better at recording, or I should say, being recorded,
as this is the cleanest, most polished record of theirs to date. I’m not sure how I feel about that
though. I’m all for bands not
sounding like garbage on record, but there’s a little bit of roughness I enjoy
about all things punk-related and that sense of mysterious weirdness seemed to
peak on the aforementioned “Clean Blood…”, with its perfect balance of
accentuating the weird parts vividly, yet still keeping a touch of the
cave-style dankness. Yet the
Austin trio does throw a few new tricks into play, particularly on the B-side
where “Soiled” dips into foggy guitar bellows, spooky basement squeals, and
jutting stabs of noise. “Fishing”
begins with a squealing tape loop that makes you think your record player
fucked up, and using various spurts of warped guitar play as hooks, all to
unique effect. “Day Of the Rope”
closes out the A-side with wild post-punk dirges, sequencer-sounding drumming,
and buzzing synths humming throughout for a try at something both new and
nerves-wracked anxiety-driven.
“Pay your rent, motherfucker!”
(Homeless)
THOU/ GREAT FALLS, split 7”
Both bands cover Shellac. And that’s a pretty good thing to do. You get this cool silkscreened package
and two crazy-ass bands, and the subject of which is another wild band… yeah, sign me up. Great Falls does an absolutely bonkers
neurotic version of “Wingwalker”.
Sure, the original is pretty bad ass in it’s own right, but Great Falls
have that way of getting all ‘random stabs in the darkness during a prison riot’
that just turns this song into a well-recorded and heavy nightmare. Thou take on the classic “Prayer To
God”. In typical Thou fashion they
definitely stray from the source and do their own thing. And usually their own thing is slow
(check) and yet still very tight (che…
wait… what’s this?). In
this case they get as noisy as possible, fuzz-out everything, and scream into
abandon, which is probably the appropriate attitude when the lyrics are ‘kill
it, fuckin’ kill it’ over and over.
I prefer the Great Falls side, but the thing as a whole is well worth
it. (Hell Comes Home)
Friday, July 3, 2015
PRE-ORDER THE NEW BLEAK LP!
Start your holiday weekend off right- the pre-order for Bleak, "We
Deserve Our Failures" is up! So go on and get it! Like now-ish.
The debut crusher from Syracuse, NY's Bleak. Bear witness to piles of riffs getting jackhammered into your skull over and over again. Everything is loud. Even the quiet parts. If you like any of the following: All Else Failed, Turmoil, Neurosis, Eyehategod, Crowbar, spiteful stuff, and a negative outlook on life in general I suppose this would fit into all of that nicely.
Comes with download
Pressing info:
100 on opaque blue
100 on green
300 black
* please state your preference in your order
Get it here: http://hexrecords.bigcartel.com/product/bleak-we-deserve-our-failures-lp
The debut crusher from Syracuse, NY's Bleak. Bear witness to piles of riffs getting jackhammered into your skull over and over again. Everything is loud. Even the quiet parts. If you like any of the following: All Else Failed, Turmoil, Neurosis, Eyehategod, Crowbar, spiteful stuff, and a negative outlook on life in general I suppose this would fit into all of that nicely.
Comes with download
Pressing info:
100 on opaque blue
100 on green
300 black
* please state your preference in your order
Get it here: http://hexrecords.bigcartel.com/product/bleak-we-deserve-our-failures-lp
Monday, June 29, 2015
THE MELVINS KEEP SYRACUSE WEIRD.
* all photos by Enrique Blanco
While I’ve seen the Melvins several
times at this point, with varying lineups, I can’t really argue against going
out to see them when they play three blocks from your house. So I set aside my regular exhilarating
Friday night of eating snacks, playing with cats, and farting into my office
chair to take the stroll down Westcott Street and getting my ears blown off by
King Buzzo and company.
I waited outside where I began my
night long stalking of Dave Curran, tour manager for Melvins (not all that
important) and bass player for Unsane (really fucking important). I bet he carries around a sealed copy
of “Scattered, Smothered, and Covered” LP just to shove in the face’s of grubby
fanboys such as myself, and so help me, I should probably take it.
What actually transpired was that I
eventually wandered in, looked at all the awesome drawings that Brian Walsby
brought on the road (he probably drew half of them during sound check), and the
other random wildness of the Melvins merch table, and then patiently waited for
the show to begin.
Le Butcherettes kicked things
off. I couldn’t tell if they were
more style than substance because the vocalist spoke only in Spanish between
songs, and I assume, during as well.
The three members decked out in bright red outfits with vocalist Teri
Gender Bender going for a Lydia Dietz marriage scene get up that must have made
playing guitar (when not playing keyboard) quite the difficult task. Her stage antics struck a bizarre tone
that was part robot-on-the-fritz, part early Karen O. spectacle. Some of it felt a bit forced, and weird
for weird’s sake. Musically,
however, they began strong with fairly straightforward riffy rock that centered
on bass and drums, and monster mash keyboards. I guess, overall, they were sort of a mixed bag.
The Melvins didn’t take long to get
rolling. Every time I have seen
them they have always been quick to just get up and start doing their thing
right after the opening act. Heck,
sometimes the opening act was in the band and there was no change over (back
when the Big Business duo were playing in the band… are they still unofficially?). but for the last couple years Jeff Pinkus from the Butthole
Surfers has been on bass duty and does an adequate job of holding it down. While I have never been a diehard
Melvins fan (I own only three of their records… for shame, I know) I recognized this set as being fairly
similar to what they played when I saw them last year. But in consulting with my man who took
the pictures, who is a diehard Melvins fan, he offered that they did indeed
draw from their vast catalog, and mixed it up across all eras of the band
(nothing off of “Senile Animal” though).
Opening with the sludgy
sledgehammer of “Hag Me” the band took their time warming up the crowd before
coasting into some more recent stuff before tossing out a Butthole Surfers
cover, and then going into some older material from “Bullhead”, “Stoner Witch”,
and even “You’re Blessened”, off of “Bullhead”. I was exceptionally stoked when they launched into a lengthy
cover of “Youth Of America” by The Wipers that spiraled into some chaotic jam
before they jumped right into “The Bit”.
They closed out with “Night Goat” followed by, “Fascists Eat Donuts”- a
song they did with Teri from Le Butcherettes accompanying. I had to look this up, as it’s actually
a cover from a band called the Pop-O-Pies. No idea. But
it’s catchy as hell and I’ve been thinking about it since with it’s repeated
chorus of “Make those donuts with extra grease/ This batch for the chief of
police!” The band just dragged it
out, slower, and slower, as they all sang the chorus again and again, slower
and weirder until it just felt like one big weird melting of time. It’s like the audio equivalent of what
I’m assuming bad drugs feel like.
As the show ended I saw Dave Curran
behind the soundboard and approached him like a weirdo and said Unsane is one
of my favorite bands ever. We
talked a bit about Pigs, and he had no visible copy of that one record I’m
missing so I let him live. Next
time. I’ll find it eventually.
Monday, June 15, 2015
COLISEUM/ CHILD BITE/ PSYCHIC TEENS ASBURY LANES 6.12.15
-->
So
just to get it out of the way, before I left for this brief trip I thought to
myself, ‘I ought to charge my camera battery’. But I didn’t.
And ya know what- the damn thing died before I even got to the
show. So instead of live pictures
of bands I’m going to put photos of my insane record haul from this show
instead.
Anyways,
it was a nice drive down to New Jersey, until I actually got to New
Jersey. They call their roads
‘highways’. But if you put a
traffic light on a road, surrounded by strip malls it ceases to be a highway.
It’s just a street at that point.
And for one reason or another, every time I go to Jersey I end up on one
of these ‘highways’ for about 20 or 30 miles. It’s mind numbing.
The actual highways aren’t much better. Never have I witnessed more insane driving outside of a NYC
cab driver on a bender.
I
eventually make it to Asbury Park and actually have some time to explore,
instead of my last visit a few years back where I wandered the boardwalk before
seeing Rorschach at the Lanes and then taking a train back that night. Cookman Ave. seemed to be the happening
spot. I checked out the GroovyGraveyard, which is rife with eclectic randomness- a bunch of assorted records,
comics, toys, etc. In other words,
a little slice of heaven for me. I
found a Monorchid gatefold LP there for five bucks. I then headed across the street to Holdfast Records. It was a very new looking, very tidy,
clean, and professional shop. As
I’m flipping through records Joe from Psychic Teens wanders in, and I’m almost
wondering how this record-fiending fella wasn’t already here. We look at records and I convince him
to buy a Most Secret Method LP because it’s five bucks and it rules. I find a Kurt LP, Seven Storey Mountain
LP, and David Byrne LP all for the total sum of about $16. Joe and I head back to Groovy Graveyard
because I tell him it rules and we discover the owner runs a noise rock forum I
post on and so we chat about all that good stuff.
I
head to the venue and meet up with people and we eventually head out to a
nearby spot called Kayas Kitchen, an all-vegan establishment, and get some food
to go. I gotta say, it’s pretty
good. A little on the pricey side,
but quite good. If you even happen
to find yourself in Belmar for some odd reason give ‘em a whirl. They got quite a variety of good stuff.
So
I get back to the venue (which I ought to add is about 20 degrees cooler due to
the ocean breeze coming off the Atlantic some 50 yards away than the sticky heat
wave engulfing town some several blocks in the other direction) just in time to
eat and then catch a chunk of the set from opener Sex Cross. It’s dudes from Old Wounds doing goth
punk, seemingly desperate to escape their hardcore roots, but not quite there
yet. I’m pretty sure I still
spotted some breakdowns. It was
decent overall for hardcore dudes who want to dress up as vamps. There was certainly a flair for
presentation and just a bit of over-doing it.
PsychicTeens were up next. They opened
with “Lust”, a slow, plodding dirge from “Come”, followed by the new-ish 7”
songs, and a couple new ones that I have heard before. It’s a bit of a weird setting because
every other time I’ve seen them it’s a small space and they are super loud. But Asbury Lanes is a bit bigger of a
venue (it’s literally an old bowling alley with a stage in the middle of it)
and they didn’t sound quite as deafening as in the past. Still a great set and it was cool to
know that there were probably plenty of people present who had never heard
them.
ChildBite then get up and miraculously create an anti-gravity zone in front of the
stage for the duration of their performance because everyone up front seemed to
lose control of all bodily functions and it became this uncoordinated mess of
swinging arms, flailing legs, stupor-induced stumbling, and general
confusion. Granted, the band is
super weird and crazy. Their
frontman was this perfect mix of Neil Fallon and Dan Higgs while the band
played some revved-up concoction of noise rock and Dead Kennedys. It was pretty awesome. The crowd, on the other hand, was
not. I mean, when you see a bunch
of 16 year old kids dancing like they’re swatting at a swarm of bees, or a
seizure-prone meth addict you give them some leeway. “They will understand rhythm some day”, you think to
yourself. But when it’s a bunch of
grown adults- one of which happened to jump on stage at one point, grab a beer
from the band, and then fall off the stage on his ass and continue to act like
a schmuck- it’s just sad and embarrassing. So yeah, Child Bite- killer. Audience- buns.
Coliseum
closes things out. Here is a band
that sounds so tight, so locked in with each other, a sound so dialed in that
if you close your eyes it’s as if you’re listening to the record. It’s that crystal clear. They play lots of new stuff, which was
fun to hear, followed by some stuff from the last two records. It’s different for sure, but you can
see where they are moving ahead and I enjoy it quite a bit.
After
the gig I crashed at a place a block away and got up early to take a stroll on
the beach before getting some dull breakfast. I got on the road and headed up to Princeton to explore the
Princeton Record Exchange. I
almost gave them all my life savings over all the good stuff I came
across. I went to sell them some
records and they offered me next to nothing for them. I guess when they offer to buy brand new LPs from you for a
buck I guess that’s how they can afford to sell a copy of “Scratch the Surface”
on vinyl for $10. It’s good and
bad. I sold them a few things I
wanted to get rid of and in turn I picked up a ton of great records on the
cheap.
After
spending way too much time in that place I made a mile, which was a lot more
slow going than I’d hoped because getting out of this state is horrible. By the time I hit Pennsyltucky I was
cruising on auto-pilot and just winged it back home. While there is no photographic evidence of my trip a parking
ticket, the sand between my toes, the ringing in my ears, and the bag full of
vinyl in the back seat is proof enough that it was a drive worth doing.
Wednesday, June 3, 2015
EX-BREATHERS JOIN UP WITH HEX RECORDS SORTA/DEFINITELY
We've made slight mention of it before, and we're seriously slacking here, but as an 'official' sort of press release I want to put it out there that I am way beyond stoked that Hex will have the pleasure of releasing the next Ex-Breathers LP! Not only do we get to release this record, but we are teaming up with an incredibly awesome label as well to do so- Exploding In Sound Records It will be awesome.
Ex-Breathers came together a few years ago in Tallahassee, Florida to play punk without clear definition. Some of their material verges on off-timed thrash, while at other times the boundary-stretching themes of Fugazi and Mission Of Burma get a heavy nod. The Minutemen's sense of weird urgency. Voivod's melding of shredding riffs and bizarre timing. Through fine tuning they began recording themselves, culminating in their first full-length, the self-released "Collision". A 7" entitled "EXBX" followed, cramming 12 songs onto a 45 just to see if they could do it. Hex Records co-released a 4-way compilation featuring 3 songs from Ex-Breathers shortly thereafter last year.
The band demo'ed their LP a couple months back and I got to hear it, and have played it constantly since. And now they have just finished the actual recording and it will be going off to press soon. Expect this sucker in the early Fall. And between now and then listen to Ex-Breathers stuff here: http://ex-breathers.bandcamp.com/
Friday, May 29, 2015
BLEAK, "DEFICIT"
Enjoy the first single from the new BLEAK LP, "We Deserve Our Failures". There's a freaky seizure-inducing video to go with it too. You can see that below. Be on the lookout for them playing everywhere this summer, and for a pre-order of the LP to go up really soon.
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