Sunday, August 19, 2018

NULL DEBUT NEW SONG AND PRE-ORDER FOR NEW LP!

NULL return with their second LP, "Act Of Love", a meditation on heavy psych, droning heaviness, and repetitive chants in 8 songs. Underscoring the haunting melodies formed by trance-like guitar lines and sung vocals is a swamp-thick sludgy bass tone, created by fuzzed-out synth and pounding drums. NULL feature members of punk champs Coliseum but appeal more to fans of groups like Lungfish, Om, and Cloakroom.
The band has spent a couple years honing the sounds on this record after their initial LP, as well as a string of splits with bands such as Self Defense Family and Husband Stitch. They have toured far and wide and will continue to tour throughout the summer and 2018.

They have debuted the first song from the LP, "Waste", which you can hear now at New Noise Magazine, along with a small write-up about the band and the song.  But if you don't like reading any more than you have to you can also get a listen to it right here as well:



Once you're finished getting zoinked out of your skull from that use your remaining facilities to order the new record, on LP (your choice of white or black vinyl), or CD, or digital by going HERE or HERE.

*If you're international try going ordering through MVD because you will probably get a better shipping rate than I can afford.  Just sayin'.

Sunday, July 29, 2018

TRANSLATE ZINE ISSUE #9 IS FINALLY OUT!



It's been a couple years, but here's a new issue of TRANSLATE, the long-running zine that occurs basically whenever I feel like it. This issue is primarily about moving to the Pacific Northwest and all the fun that comes with it. Stories of transitioning out of an entire life lived in New York and the months leading up to the big move, and the resultant story of the move itself, adjusting to life in a much bigger and less grumpy city, as well as the cartoons/visual art and jack-assery that accompanies basically everything else I do. 32 pages of stuff for your eyes wrapped in a two-sided, multi-layered letterpress cover.  Some of the covers were printed on reflective silver paper, the rest on a heavyweight yellow stock.  Fancy!  Roll the dice, see which one you get.  Order now:

Thursday, July 26, 2018

IT'S FUGGIN' HOT, READ REVIEWS THAT WILL MAKE YOUR RECORDS MELT.

So when I was back in NY I wasn't really all in on summer because it got so grossly humid.  But I dealt with it because it sure as hell beat Winter.  Now that I'm in Oregon, where the Winter really isn't rough at all can I just say I'm still not that into Summer?  Like, it doesn't get humid out here really at all.  But man, it gets hot.  So instead of actually going out and doing stuff I'm attempting to keep my fragile skin from getting flayed and just power-listening through lots of records/music/things/whathaveyou.  And that leaves me time to write about it all as well.  So yeah, take a gander at what's crossed my path these last few weeks and investigate it for yourself.

BULGING, “Spaces”
Composed of members of Birmingham’s stellar NULL, Bulging pines a similar sonic terrain though I’d say a bit more loose and weird.  While NULL basks in slower, repetitive heavy mantras Bulging works in angular melodies, a touch of late 90’s Dischord oddity, and a bit of lo-fi.  But they still keep it fairly slow and, at times, kind of heavy, with areas of vocal repetition.  It’s definitely a record that makes you a bit uneasy listening to, like there’s something kind of sinister and weird lurking beneath the otherwise cool songs going on here.  “Song #8” is the most upbeat of the bunch with it’s breezy melody that eventually breaks into a Hoover-esque sort of blown-out chorus.  I’m not sure what to reference with this as it reminds me of a few things that don’t at all go together, but it fits into it’s own little compartment.  Slow, odd, melodic, lurking, sorta heavy, some bits of slower no-wave weirdness, but still catchy and entertaining?  Bulging, look into it, get weird.  (self-released)


BUMMER, “Holy Terror”
Get ready to get pulverized by an endless barrage of riffs.  Bummer, who surprisingly do not come from some remote hellscape (well, maybe Kansas City might be hell-ish), sure do have a lot of pent up aggression for three seemingly easy-going Midwesterners.  However, this is music meant for totally directionless pothead heshers who stay awake for three days at a time raging as hard as humanly possible and want to explore the other end of aggressive music that isn’t Municipal Waste.  So before the inevitable tidal wave of vomit comprised entirely of stale beer, moldy pizza, probably some guys class ring swallowed on a dare, and a punch card eaten in protest of working comes spewing forth this record needs to be the soundtrack of everything that comes before that.  Every Time I Die minus the metalcore?  Breather Resist without all the math-y parts, but just as chaotic?  The soundtrack for smashing beercans on your forehead after power bombing on your skateboard off a parking garage and puking into a dumpster.  I fucking love this record.  (Learning Curve)


CHRMR, “Respective Orbits”
This is totally on me, but I just assumed this Rochester, NY band was named after the Breather Resist album of the same name, which lead me to think they sounded like that.  Nothing could really be further from truth and it’s sort of fucking me up trying to justify why this group sounds like something completely different.  I’m learning to live with it.  Featuring ex-members of local heavyweights Sulaco this group takes a somewhat different approach, which is primarily in the vocals. So imagine some of the more modern vibes going on with Baroness and Mastodon, sludge-ify it by about 30% and add completely sung vocals.  It’s overall pretty heavy music, but has a sort of mainstream-ish appeal at times because of those vocals and some of the melodic tendencies going on.  I’m going to say though, the vocals- they’re just not doing it for me. Not into it.  Some of the music is executed wonderfully and has a very epic, sludgy heaviness to it that reminds the listener of that Sulaco connection, and just good, heavy music in general.  This is only 6 songs but it clocks in at close to half an hour so it may as well be a full length.  (self-released)


HUNDREDS OF AU, “Communications Link Re-established”
You can take the boy out of New Jersey but you can’t take the New Jersey out of the boy.  That’s the classic old saying, right?  No?  So what.  I’m going with it.  For as long as I can remember my man Tom Schlatter has been hashing it out in numerous New Jersey bands, some more known than others, and he certainly has his own style.  Sure, it owes a lot to old Ebullition Records material and chaotic emo of the mid-late 90’s, but now when I hear modern bands that take a page from that style (think Touche Amore and certain parts of Converge for more well-known, albeit not-quite-on-the-nose, comparisons) I kind of think of various NJ miscreants laying the groundwork for a lot of that.  Having moved up to the wasteland of Albany, NY Schlatter started Hundreds Of Au with a different lineup that released a decent demo, but it kind of sputtered out fairly quick.  Enter a handful of dudes from New Jersey to re-invigorate the project and Hundreds Of Au now has this 9-song CD that races by in about 17 minutes, and it’s quite good.  So yes, if 90’s-styled fast, passionate, screamed aggressive emo that gets chaotic while still finding a hook and melody from time to time is your thing this ought to scratch that itch quite nicely.  And then you have to write a 9 page essay to HeartattaCk about how the ‘itch’ ‘scratched’ was ‘metaphorical’ and you would never really aim to do harm to your own skin. (Middleman Records)


INTEGRITY/ KRIEG split
Dom Romeo continues his reign over the Integrity camp with several more songs that focus heavily on the thrash/Japanese hardcore worship, mixed with some serious evil metal.  Sure, Integrity is already sort of known for that, but the more breakdown-heavy hardcore that comprises a lot of their material is pretty much abandoned on this split.  I’m not much of a metal guy really, but I think one of the songs on this side is a cover, but I’m not certain.  Krieg I’m not too familiar with because they’re typically considered a black metal band and I’m definitely not into black metal by and large.  However, Krieg sound more like just, ya know, regular metal with vocals recorded in some old cave or sewer.  They break out a new song, an older song, and a live track on their side.  Some of it works, some of it gets kind of dull after a bit.  But, you know, it’s evil.  Hail Satan.  (Relapse)


JAY JAYLE, “No Trail and Other Unholy Paths”
I’m always amazed at how Evan Patterson can work within a genre (or subgenre) and just completely master it, whether it’s the math-y hardcore of National Acrobat and Breather Resist, or switching gears to simplified heavy amp/pedal worship noise rock in Young Widows, and now something completely different with Jaye Jayle.  What started as a solo project that evolved into a pretty serious band, things started as primal dark, dusty desert tunes infused with bits of Americana and blues.  But man oh man, this new record just blows everything else they have done to date out of the water.  Things still retain a repetitive, trance-like simplicity, but mixed into the dark folk is almost industrial-sounding krautrock and vibed-out synthesizers, occasional saxophone bleating, plenty of back-up vocals and a confidence that sets a tone of eerie loneliness.  As David Yow would say, “like dust with boots on”…  this is kind of that and Jaye Jayle have really unleashed an excellent record that draws you in and leaves you all alone in the middle of nowhere.  They have really gained a mastery of whatever it is that they’re doing and with each stylistic change that Patterson goes through in his various musical outfits I’m happy to be along for the ride as a fan.  (Sargent House)


OVLOV, “Tru”
They were around for awhile, did some very Dinosaur Jr sounding records, split up hard, and now they’re back together doing more very Dinosaur Jr sounding music.  So there’s nothing wrong with that. OK, so that’s oversimplifying it a bit.  But it does have some strong Dino Jr vibes happening.  And there’s also plenty of lo-fi, fuzzed-out beyond your wildest shoegaze-y dreams jams, some chill indie rocking a la bands like Teenage Cool Kids, and just a hint of synth thrown in here and there for good measure.  While things feel all ‘coasting down a dream’ contemplative and driving on songs like “Stick”, and then get quiet-to-loud Sonic Youth freak-out on “Tru Punk”, and go full blown-out speakers with the speedy and dense “Fast G”, it’s album closer “Grab It From the Garden” which shows Ovlov in a form that very much suits them- slow and thunderous crushes of Hum-esque distortion and pretty melodies amongst the lush rock this band has turned out on past records.   It’s quite an excellent return to form for these Connecticut cats and I for one am glad to see them back in action.  They have made quite an exceptional return, even if the band was put to bed for only a couple years before re-emerging.  (Exploding In Sound)


PRETTY PLEASE, “Fur Model” CD
Heavy grunge.  Nirvana worship slowed down to early 90’s Melvins speed for much of the record.  Add to that some second tier picked-over forgotten grunge major label casualties in the melody department and you get a fair assessment of how Pretty Please sounds, whom I guarantee were barely kids when the era they are cherry picking from was occurring.  I’m hardly bashing this though.  I’m pretty into it.  I’m kind of surprised how well they get the era nuances down pat.  “Milk Steak” pines Nirvana’s “Big Long Now” hard for a dip into B-side territory, while “It Pays To Complain” moves fast enough to make up for the syrupy pace of many of the other tracks here.  “Valentine” goes for a creepy-late-night-stalker-creeping-in-the-bushes vibe that for whatever reason- and I swear I mean nothing negative by this- reminds me of Filter meets the Toadies.  Honestly, I think it may be my favorite track on this.  Really, this is good stuff.  I’m enjoying it thoroughly and you ought to as well.  (self-released)
  


SUPERTHIEF, "Eating Alone In My Car" EP
After some buzz with several releases over the last couple years Austin’s Superthief returns with a new EP of bizarre noise rock goodness.  Think the serpentine bass of Jesus Lizard, snarky, snarled vocals a la Albini, and grating, knotty guitar work that lurks as well as it annihilates.  Things start off with a tense, yet propulsive tempo on “Gone Country” before going into the more dirge-y and gruff “6 Months Blind”.  “Woodchipper” flies right by in just over a minute of damaged hardcore fury.  “Eating Alone In My Car” is a stop-start grooving piss take on, well, I guess the weird awkwardness of eating alone in your car.  It’s weird, pissed-off, and heavy and ya know, I guess I can relate.  “Swaggy” closes out the EP with an ultra-tense diatribe into a swampy mess before wrapping up with several minutes of a repetitive bass riff that will stick with you until you’re beyond annoyed with it.  I love the crazy tension, wild energy, and messy yet cohesive damage being created by this group.  (Learning Curve)

 

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

WELCOME TO SUMMER, READ REVIEWS OF THINGS

I no longer have clever titles for these posts, my apologies.  Anyway, it's summer, what the heck are you doing reading this stuff?  Unless, of course, you're doing this outdoors, in which case, carry on.  Behold- some gross, ugly punk; some reading material in printed form; some thoughtfully-crafted thinking person's music.  It's all here really.  What more do you want?

CLOSET WITCH, s/t
Totally manic grindcore out of Iowa, which makes sense because if I lived in a flat, and vapid wasteland like Iowa I’d probably be compelled to play music this harsh as well given the wrecked mental state I’d clearly be in due to my surroundings.  With this release you get a good mix of standard fare blasting, but things move like a tornado, often a blurred and chaotic mess in the best way possible.  Other times less traditional aspects come into play, akin to their recent tour mates in Cloud Rat and their experiments with epic atmospherics and occasional sludgy breakdowns.  And other times there’s some bizarre Deadguy/Rorschach-styled noisecore leads mixed in with the whirlwind of sound.  It’s kind of messy, and there’s often a lot going on.  However, Closet Witch seem to be closing in on getting their thing, whatever that may be exactly, honed to perfection.  They haven’t been at it for too long, but they’re quickly getting real good.  (Halo Of Flies)


GUNK, vol. 1
Professional illustrator Curt Merlo takes a brief respite from his day job to throw together a small zine of his weirdo art and short comic stories that are heavily influenced by Charles Burns and 50’s comic book ads.  So, of course, I’m into it.  I dig the grainy print style of the zine and the limited use of color.  It definitely gives the whole thing a 60’s chapbook feel.  It’s rather short though and having a little extra content would be great.  But hey, I’ll take what I can get. Get slimed in the weird world of Gunk.  (Saboteur Press)

HEALER, “LP One”
And out of left field comes the debut full length from Buffalo’s Healer!  They have been tearing up faces for a few years now around the Northeast and, to date, they basically just have a 7” to their credit.  However, that is totally made up for with 22 rippers in all of about 25 minutes on this record.  If you hadn’t figured out already, Healer play short and fast.  Their music is a mix of powerviolence, some Negative Approach-styled hardcore, a few slow and sludgy parts, and raspy, guttural, nasty as a Rochester garbage plate that’s been left out in the sun for a couple days vocals.  Thus far, this album has been released digitally, yet I am assured it will also be released on a physical format.  I’m looking forward to that so I can read the lyrics to such eloquently titled tracks such as “Hammer Time”, “River Phoenix”, “Hairclub For Men”, and “Potato Salad”.  I know it sounds a little silly, but I’m pretty sure there’s some weighty topics behind those titles.  Get wrecked, Healer are no joke.  (Healer)


L.M.I., “IV”
There’s so much going on here that makes this a bit confusing.  And I don’t mean too much going on like some shitty tech-death wanna-be early 00’s metalcore band.  It’s like, in my own mind, collisions of influences that don’t make sense, but still, overall, sound sort of cool.  So there’s a NYHC sort of vibe to a lot of the songwriting in that you got some kind of groove-oriented, but punk-leaning, hardcore that brings to mind more modern NYHC bands.  And then there’s also a heavy post-hardcore style going on that some of the Long Island bands from the 90’s brought.  So far that doesn’t seem too out of the realm of possibility.  But then you get this weird tone to the guitars and all of a sudden a chaotic element, like early Drowningman comes into play and I start to think that none of this makes sense and I’m OK with it.  People under the age of 30 probably won’t know what to do with that description and they probably hear something totally different.  But you know, that’s what I hear, so deal with it.  This EP tosses out five more rippers for scratching your head while moshing.  The weirdest part- they’re not even from NYC or Long Island…  they’re from PENNSYLVANIA.  What the fuck universe do I live in? (self-released)
 

SELF DEFENSE FAMILY, “Have You Considered Punk Music”
This is a hilarious title considering this is such a soft record.  Even the title track meanders with some Americana-style twang and, if I had to take a guess, the band did not consider punk music when it was being composed (or maybe they did, and their answer was, ‘let’s not make ‘punk’ music’).  Honestly, my favorite material from this rotating cast of musicians was when they were at their Lungfish-worshipping apex.  The music was melodic, introspective, and still had a bit of heft to it.  Since then they have gotten way more mellow.  Hell, Patrick doesn’t even sound like a yelping dog anymore (that’s not a critique, I was cool with it), trading hoarse yelling for almost whispered thoughts on all the usual abstractions and point-blank ‘this is my life’ type lyrics he is known for.  So as much as the music doesn’t quite do it for me as much these days I very much respect what they do for always pushing in different directions, even if those directions are as gentle as playing wind chimes with feathers.  And I feel like I’m totally trashing this record, but it’s quite good in fact.  You just have to go into it knowing this is an ever-evolving band and while they may play very reserved and sparse music lately it’s not without a strong impact.  There’s a quiet tension, plaintive melodies where lyrical twists fall like bricks even though they are delicately spoken, and an underlying current of experimentation that is always willing to try something new and seeing if it sticks, and making it all sound natural.  Not a bad effort if you ask me.  (Run ForCover)


SLEEPLESS NIGHTS zine #3
As far as straightforward hardcore zines go…  um…  I’m surprised they still exist?  Get transported back to 1998 and check out this slick rag that is about 50% photos (full disclosure, I contributed a number of pictures to this) and the rest interviews.  Within those interviews you will find the always-amazing Greg Bennick going on about his insanely productive life and one incredible story about traveling to the Inside Out reunion shows in 1991, which pretty much is worth the price of the zine alone.  Ray from Taken/100 Words Or Less offers some interesting insight on growing up in SoCal and a couple rather basic interviews with fairly new bands Cutting Through and Big Cheese. In addition, a crazy story about some adventurous kids in Utah going cave diving and dying (I actually heard this story from Greg Bennick a few years ago), and some on-the-road shoplifting (hello, ‘youth’ my old friend).  Maybe 20 years ago I’d be a little nonplused by this since 10 zines a week came out like this in this style.  But since it is a rarity these days I was pleasantly entertained and informed by this.  Not too shabby.

TONGUE PARTY, “Looking For a Painful Death”
I don’t know how this band gets their tone but it’s so ridiculously gnarly that listening to it is like trying to walk through a wall made of slimy bees.  Yeah, that’s my analogy for the day.  Also, this band is named ‘Tongue Party’.  Let all this grossness seep into you and then you might be ready for the new full length from these Midwest garbage dwellers.  Lots of fuzzy, beefy, ugly riffs abound here, which stop and start on a dime while blasting between unbridled noise rock Valhalla and revved up speedy hardcore-thrash.  They did a split not too long ago with USA Nails (another amazing band that I’d just like plug as a sidebar) and that was my first introduction, and they kind of stole the show.  This record just comes full force tenfold from that and I’m pleased as punch that they sound as weird and ugly as they do. This record contains a song called “I Can Shit Anywhere”.  I respect their commitment to form.  Well done.  (Learning Curve Records)


YOB, “Our Raw Heart”
Yob has been an institution in Oregon, and in the doom/sludge scene, for over 20 years.  I had no clue they had been around that long.  I also had no idea this was their eighth album.  I’ve hardly listened to any of their other albums, but checking out this behemoth of a record (and believe me, it’s a task at 73 minutes, I had to break it up into two days of listening to get through it all) is a varied affair.  There is crushing heaviness, and slow atmospheric passages filled with melody and sung vocals.  But just as those parts come and go the doom that I’m sure long time listeners love is ever-present.  My understanding is that this is a sort of different record for Yob and, to me, that difference is song to song.  Some of it almost feels like different recording sessions even.  “The Screen” is easily one of the meanest and heaviest songs I’m sure I’ll hear all year.  And then the title track (which closes out the record on a mighty note) is big and lush and full of huge melodies as vast and scenic as the Columbia River gorge of the members home state.  I’m not sure what to make of it all as there’s a great variety throughout the record, and while it lacks a bit of consistency throughout, it certainly showcases what Yob is capable of on many levels.  (Relapse)  

Monday, May 28, 2018

NULL TO RELEASE THEIR NEXT LP THROUGH HEX RECORDS


NULL, from Birmingham, AL, will be releasing their second LP entitled “Act Of Love” this summer on Hex Records.
Prior to the record coming out they will embark on a short tour with Young Widows.
Go see them on the following dates:

June 12 - Asheville @ Mothlight**
June 13 - Pittsburgh @ Howlers**
June 15 - Brooklyn @ Saint Vitus
June 16 - DC @ Rock and Roll Hotel
June 17 - Richmond @ Strange Matter
June 18 - Carrboro @ Cat’s Craddle
June 19 - Atlanta @ The Earl
June 20 - Birmingham @ The Nick
June 21 - Louisville @ Zanzabar

** = Null only 
 You can hear some of NULL’s previous recordings here: https://nullvibes.bandcamp.com/

More info to come soon.....

Saturday, May 26, 2018

LIKE WOLVES PLAYING A SHOW IN JULY!


Emerging from the shadows (or just busy playing in most of the members other awesome band, Coming Down) the hunks in LIKE WOLVES will come out from the rocks they reside under to play a show in Rochester in July.  More info can be obtained here:  https://www.facebook.com/events/2082513381997473/
To celebrate this occasion you can grab their self-titled LP for $8 this week in the webby-store.  Get crackin':  https://hexrecords.bigcartel.com/product/like-wolves-s-t-lp

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

THESE ARE THE REVIEWS FOR MAY

Um, so 2018 has been awesome so far.  So much good music has come out already and it's not even halfway through the year.  I realize I had previously mentioned I was planning on slowing down the review stuff, but honestly there's a lot I want to write about and I think this might be the biggest batch this year so far.
But just writing up review stuff is not all that I aim to use this space for.  I assure you, within the next couple weeks there will be some awesome label news.  So just letting you all know to stay tuned.
In the meantime, check the stuff out here and get mesmerized at all the cool music happening now.

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THE APPARITION ORCHESTRA, “Obsolete”
The duo of Bob Gorham (Blood Sun Circle, Engineer) and Jon Davis (Difficult, Night Owls, Another Breath) have worked together on a variety of projects, including Broken Spirit, that have often involved going off to a cabin in the middle of nowhere, getting tanked, and writing lonesome campfire songs that have the weight of 100 suns.  They probably also wrestle bears and survive off of eating coyotes who might get brave and wander within 200 yards of these guys, but that’s just speculation.  Who knows what really goes on out there in the woods.  So going into their latest collaboration I thought it might just be more of that, but under a different moniker.  However, while this music sounds sparse and lonesome most of the time it has a far more cinematic, movie score quality to it.  I don’t listen to heck of a lot of soundtracks, but if I had to make any sort of comparison it would be similar to the music that went a long with “There Will Be Blood”.  That’s the best I got.  Overall it’s quiet and disarming, the hint of something sinister going on deep underneath, and primarily instrumental, save for one track where they are shouting like some combination of a chain gang’s work song and an ancient ritual being conducted in a cave.  It’s weird and it’s pretty cool.  It’s certainly a departure from the music these guys usually create with their other bands.  (Drops Of Us)


COMING DOWN, EP
They released a demo a little while ago, got kind of quiet, and now have come back swinging with this excellent new EP of songs heavily informed by rocking punk in the style of Swiz, Seaweed, Give, with hints of post-punk melody akin to Echo and the Bunnymen or other late 80’s DC hardcore.  Rochester’s Coming Down is basically most of hometown stalwarts Like Wolves, but with vocalist Rory Van Grol (Achilles, Soul Control, Standfast, How We Are) handling the mic.  It makes for a good mix of excellent people making some exceptional music.  I can’t describe how much joy I feel knowing that long time friends and creative types continue to make great music in different permutations, it keeps this whole thing going round and round.  All six songs on this are quite wonderful, but I think my favorite track might be “Exhausted”, as it combines some great catchy riffs with a perfect amount of aggression and good sing-alongs- “Trying to understand, your point of view!”  And check out that great cover art- it looks like something that would have come out on Cruz Records or Sub Pop in 1991 meets Keith Haring subway tag. (Sore Ear Collective)


GLOOP, “The Tourist” CD
Gloop consists of members of Rhin, another band championed via review on this site, and they pine a similar territory, albeit with a little less distortion and less thick riffs.  Both bands love the noise rock cesspool of filthy rock, however Gloop aim a bit more in a Hot Snakes meets early Nirvana fashion, but weirder and faster.  I’m perfectly OK with this and welcome their wild clatter.  Eight songs fly right by and wrap up quicker than you can rip the sleeves off a flannel shirt.  A good soundtrack for the next time you have a hissy fit.  (GrimoireRecords)


GONER, “goner.” EP
From out of the blue comes this new Syracuse band that immediately sounds like they have their business together and are ready to straight up murder you.  I’m getting a fairly strong Cult Leader vibe here, except with way more blast beats.  So get in that frame of mind of very metallic hardcore with lots of noisy, off-kilter parts and furious blasting.  It’s a pretty damn good introduction that ought to melt your skin right off of your skull.  The track arrangement really makes you think there’s only three songs given “Momentary Clarity”s rather epic ending and then, oh shit, here’s another song!  Add some subtle noise parts as segues and other violent tendencies and you got yourself a heck of a demo.  (self-released)


HEADS, “Collider”
I feel like between this German groups first LP and this new one a big change happened, but maybe I’m wrong.  I feel like their older stuff may have been more upbeat and playing it a bit loose and somewhat rowdy.  However, “Collider” is more serious, a weighty tome rife with huge sounds and calculated execution.  Imagine the slow, deliberate lurch and morose heaviness of Young Widows on their “In and Out Of Youth and Lightness” LP mixed with the bright, shimmering post-hardcore rock of Shiner/The Life and Times.  It’s less chaotic than I thought it might be, but it’s a welcome listen for sure.  I’m really enjoying it, in particular the lead single “Urges”, the almost industrial guitar grating of “Mannequin”, and the unexpected (but very welcome) bluesy textures added by a saxophone at the close of the epic swell in the final track “Youth”.  I really enjoy what this band brings to the table.  It takes some patience for each song to unravel and build, but the payoff is worth it.  (Corpse Flower Records)


THE HIRS COLLECTIVE, “Friends, Lovers, Favorites”
I didn’t know too much about this band for a long time.  I’d heard their name thrown around a bit and knew they were well-known within the trans/punk/DIY community, but I had no idea what they sounded like.  I really was unprepared for how fucking vicious this sounds.  Although this record abounds with numerous guests (hence ‘collective’) it seems the bulk of the songs are performed by the vocalist, drummer, and a guitarist with a fuckton of amps and cabs belting out 30 second blasts of grind, powerviolence, and monstrous metallic breakdowns.  In that sense it’s sort of low-hanging fruit to lose your damn mind to.  On another level, I’m personally not used to bands identifying as trans to have an interest in creating music this pissed off.  The closest I’ve experienced is G.L.O.S.S. and they did not trifle with these sorts of metallic barrages against sanity.  This is straight up revenge sort of music, taking that feeling of disempowerment, insecurity, oppression, and helplessness and turning it all into blistering rage.  So yeah, not only does this record have about 20 new songs, it also includes the “You Can’t Kill Us” EP, and- savor this because I will likely never utter these words again- some remixes that are not half bad.  They actually come off as cool experiments that completely transform the song instead of just shuffle around bits and pieces with a techno backdrop.  So kudos on that.  Also, this is one fancy-ass looking record.  It’s worth your time (since it takes all of about 25 minutes to digest all 35 or so songs here.  (Get Better Records/ SRA Records)


THE HIRS COLLECTIVE/ THOU split 12”
There’s no information on this record whatsoever.  No band names, no release info, no song titles, no credits, not even anything on the center labels of the actual record.  It’s just Thou on one side and HIRS on the other doing a bunch of Nirvana covers.  And, naturally, doing them well.  At this point Thou have done kind of a lot of covers and I’m almost surprised that they haven’t repeated themselves on this collection.  But you get the best out of both bands and if you have enjoyed this stuff in the past there’s no reason not to enjoy it now.  While there is no information anywhere on this record the cover art does allude to what’s in store, kind of (a heart-shaped box?).  I’m going to guess not many of these were made and they’re probably going to be rather difficult to find?  (Get Better Records)

QUICKSAND, “Triptych Continuum”
Record Store Day, in the last few years, is usually a rather dull affair with diminishing returns.  However, the idea of Quicksand dropping a 12” of B-sides from their most recent LP as a RSD release is reason enough to deal with the crowds. Fortunately, this year I found a store with no dumb lines and more than enough copies to go around.  Opening track “Multiverse” is a great addition to the new stuff and would have fit nicely on “Interiors”.  It’s got a great main riff and a great melodic chorus, like any good Quicksand song.  Then you get a quick little interlude, and the last track “Spoken Through Clouds”.  That song I can see why they left off the LP, because while it’s mostly enjoyable it sort of lacks a cohesive structure and then just sort of ends abruptly.  Bonus fun:  the B-side of this 12” is etched with a cool design.  Quicksand completists take note.  (Epitaph)
 


RED HARE, “Little Acts Of Destruction”
I’ve been waiting for this.  Ever since this group released their first LP my immediate reaction was, ‘when do I get more?’  As I grow older I become more enamored with musicians and bands that are older than I am who can continually conjure creativity in an exhilarating and refreshing way, and not phoning it in, because I hope to also be able to be at least a tenth as creative in my own way when I reach their age.  The people in Red Hare do just that.  Jason Farrell is seemingly an endless wellspring of incredible riffs and melodies.  Drummer Joe Gorelick compliments his playing perfectly, maybe a little less gonzo/off-the-rails than he was on the first LP, but equally as powerful and inventive.  Vocalist Shawn Brown continues to have commanding presence and I feel many of these songs contain some of the strongest, most poignant and well thought-out lyrics he has written.  Bassist Dave Eight completes the Swiz/Sweetbelly Freakdown triad, which most of Red Hare is culled from, with his lean delivery.  All these characters have spent a long time playing together and are completely tuned into one another to create a very distinctive style that combines the best of Revolution Summer-era DC hardcore, and the more rock n’ roll upbeat energy of 90’s Dischord bands.  But comparisons are mostly useless because eventually references primarily lead back to the band members.  No one plays quite like Jason Farrell.  No one sings like Shawn Brown.  It’s been a few years since “Nites Of Midnite”, which only gave listeners 8 songs.  This is a solid 14 tracks, none of which feel dull, or just shoehorning in to make for a longer record.  It all feels vital and welcome, from the aggressive thrust of “Edit the Family” to the bass-driven drive of “Foley Artist”, the stop-start stutter rapid delivery of the title track, to the super catchy feel-good nostalgia trip of “Take a Walk”.  Red Hare really nailed it once again and I couldn’t be happier.  (Dischord/Hellfire)


YOUNG WIDOWS, “Decayed:  10 Years Of Cities, Wounds, Lightness, and Pain”
Just to be clear, this is not a new Young Widows LP in the direct sense (however, just putting this out there to the band- PLEASE MAKE A NEW LP).  It’s a collection of all their singles, B-sides, and assorted ephemera they have released in their existence as a band that did not make it onto any of their official full lengths.  Since I fucking love this band I already have pretty much all of this stuff.  The songs from the five various split 7”s they did are all on here, as well as a couple stand-alone singles and comp appearances make it on to the record.  Finally, there are several songs that never made it onto anything else, so with that you get around 4 never-released-elsewhere songs.  That should probably be worth the price of admission alone if the very excellent cover art doesn’t get you first.  Again, while I have most of this material on other formats already I would still recommend this to fans of the band because some of these B-sides are very strong material for the band.  “Long Live the New Weight” might be one of my personal favorites from the band, as it is the most brooding, mysterious, and interesting songs the band has done.  I’m surprised it never went onto an official full length.  Also, the original recording of “Swamped and Agitated” is quite wonderful as well, since once again, it is one of the best songs the band ever wrote and what’s better than one version of a great song (it’s ‘two’, that’s the answer).  So, yes, this is for completist nerds.  But I think it’s also great to pick up if you’re a casual fan of the group as well.  (Temporary Residence)