Monday, January 5, 2026
Album Review: TrndyTrndy - Virtua
Wednesday, December 31, 2025
2025 Year-End Invitational
Ah, another year, another year older, another year closer to kissing dirt. I should be less glib in my introduction for this year's list because this year was not so bad on my ears. Many artists of note, prestige, and accreditation that I've managed to keep a bead on had releases. Melody's Echo loaded a hot one into the Chamber, and Stereolab made themselves heard again with a fresh sonic assay. Billy Woods dropped an album in the same year that he and Elucid ignited a heater with The Alchemist, and then The Alchemist daisy-chained that dish with a second serving of Alfredo along with Freddie Gibbs. La Dispute crashed back into view with No One Was Driving the Car, White Reaper showed they still have something left in the tank with Only Slightly Empty, and Deftones shared some Private Music with the public. Also, Turnstile released Glow On again for some reason. It's all fantastic, and you won't hear a disparaging word from these lips as far as the quality of any of it, but... why do I still feel underwhelmed? Am I just spoiled for choice? Spiritually sick? I can't say for sure, but I just can't muster the will to commentate on any of it.
"Saying thing is your job! You have one job! Why you no do job good?!?" I hear you shrieking at me (hypothetically). Firstly, no, my actual job is much less interesting than writing about music (and incidentally pays much better too [emphasis for exaggeration]), and secondly, none of the "big" releases this year are of the kind that I even entertain for coverage here, normally. They're all either on major labels (or on labels that are large enough that they can run in the same pack as the majors on occasion), and they all have large enough audiences that my throwing 2 cents into the coffee can doesn't do much for either of us (emotionally, commercially, artistically, etc...)
Then there is the fact that they're all huge la discourse artists, aka music makers that you have to have an opinion on (mandatorily sanguine btw unless you're carving a niche brand as a "discerning" contrarian [ie a fussy little bitch]) in order to build a reputation as a take-haver, taste-contriver, and cultural instigator (read: gatekeeper). None of that interests me. I'm not looking to become a marketable personality, one who imposes a canon on people, enforces a listening regimen, or gives people anxiety about what they are or aren't committing brainpower to enjoying (however low voltage). My goal here is to share what I find interesting/invigorating with you as a supplement to your other habits of listening and engagement, as a personal labor of love and expressive outlet, and hopefully in a way that is enough off the beaten path that you escape the dehumanizing torrent of algorithmic optimization- at least for the one minute to an hour or so it takes to read/listen one of my reviews/interviews (hey, a minute of fresh air in the prison yard a day helps reduce stress and illness in inmates according to leading studies on the subject, so you can think of me as providing a similar benefit).
The other thing about all these big, crucial names in music (really any flagship standard-bearers in the moment) is that even when what they're doing is good, worthy, and platinum standard (which, in my estimation, it mostly is), emotionally, for me, it just lands like more "content." Like, I like what they do, but keeping up with them kind of feels like being on a treadmill long after the buildup of lactic acid in my system has caused my organs to begin humming with a concerning arrhythmia. As in, "Oh, so-and-so has a drop on the way, I should probably know what that's about," instead of IDK, giving my brain a break, or whatever... Continuing as before, it often feels like running an extra mile after I've already completed a 5k. I have to ask myself, am I doing this for my own health, or am I doing it because other people are going to run that extra mile, so I should too...? It's a paradox I've wrestled with for a while without a clear or satisfying resolution.
Something that Danny Brown (whose LP, Stardust, was an essential release for me this year) said in an interview recently that resonated with me is that there are "too many artists, and not enough fans." This was in response to a general question about why it's harder than ever to find fresh-sounding music, and it's a sentiment I understand deeply. Everyone is trying to sell you something and no one is happy with what they've got. Too many proclaimers, and not enough people to hear their pronouncements. Too many profits, and not enough disciples. Too much butter and not enough popcorn. Especially as someone who considers themselves both an artist (don't laugh) and an avid listener (ok, fine, laugh), I think I have to get better at being the latter and be more comfortable with modest ambitions towards the former. In other words, I need to focus on listening more deeply and thoughtfully, and being more selective about what I hear, while having fewer expectations as to my status as an indie/DIY/punk/emo/blowhard/etc...etc... blogger. After all, appreciation is the point, and if something doesn't call out to me, it's alright to leave it unexamined, resting, at peace where it lies. I've already started to do just that, filtering more of what I hear and not chasing things down if they don't immediately grab my attention. But as far as content here, I'm definitely looking to make a notable pivot in coverage- after I clean out the current backlog of albums angling for my assessment (said list is about 900 albums long btw).
It might be a minute, but where I'd like to direct my focus in the future is at more international artists, specifically those coming out of Africa and South and Central America. For various reasons, these parts of the world are on the rise and rapidly more self-sustaining, and these trends are going to result in a cultural output in the coming years that I'm excited to see blossom into maturity. I've already received two emails in the last week of this year from publicists promoting amapiano artists, so the shift might be easier than I realized, as the universe may be pulling me in that direction with or without my conscious assent.
In sum, my goals for 2026, for this blog and my life, are to
be more chill towards myself and music, and to be a better listener,
appreciating what I have and looking towards a brighter future (even if the
brightest stars are not shining nearest to my home). As for 2025, below is a
list of 25 albums I thought were rad as hell and/or touched my soul but didn't get around to writing
about in the preceding 12 months. Have at them and have a Happy New Year!
MJ Noble - Songs From My Castle Tower (Doom Trip)
Shallowater - God's Gonna Give You A Million Dollars (Self-Released)
life - we won't say a word until tomorrow (Self-Released)
Cola Boyy - Quit to Play Chess (Record Makers)
Faetooth - Labyrinthine (The Flenser)
Liaam - Dancing With My Clothes On (Self-Released)
Sallow Moth - Mossbane Lantern (Lilang Isla)
The last time I encountered NYC quartet YHWH Nailgun was when I stumbled across their 2022 EP while killing time in an Airbnb in Louisville. I have such a vivid memory of that place, as well as the way YHWH's ricochet and recoil contrasted with its pseudo-Victorian decor, dark-shrouded interior, and sturdy but ancient furniture, shattering the idle calm of that place as if it were a radiation-laden satellite tumbling back in time to Deep Impact the house Wuthering Heights was based on. Their LP 45 Pounds eternalizes the freak energy that captivated me initially, while continuing to be just as incongruously alien within the modern setting of my home as they appeared to me while I was hibernating between the folds of an Emily Brontë novel. On this album, YHWH articulates something sonically akin to a lobotomized David Byrne, whose frontal lobe has been partially replaced with an outdated TV antenna that only picks up scrambled broadcasts of West African variety shows and rejected episodes of Later... with Jools Holland from an alternative dimension where Xiu Xiu had pivoted to become a particularly bizarre and brazen, hemp and barbed-wire necklace-hawking jam band. It's called 45 Pounds, but to me it's as dense and massive as a black hole caving in God's forehead.
Mildred - Pt. 1 (Dead Mothers Collective)
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| Pictured: Me trying to enjoy my evening. |
Sunday, November 30, 2025
Interview: Why Bother?
In this episode of the I Thought I Heard A Sound Podcast, Terry of Mason City's Why Bother? explains to me over the phone why he and his band don't play live and why he doesn't care what you think of their music. Also, he talks a little about the Return of the Living Dead soundtrack, which is a rad film, and I was happy to hear him give it some love. I'm not going to try to sell you too hard on this one. It's either you get Why Bother?, or you don't. This conversation was recorded via my cellphone, so the audio quality isn't as good as I'd prefer it to be, but you can still hear Terry pretty clearly, and I kind of like all the muffled, scratchy sounds that come through over the receiver. It is what it is. Interview is below:
Saturday, November 29, 2025
Album Review: Post Heaven - The Space That's In Between
I doubt this was the actual initiation point for their EP's title, but the line "The space that's in between insane and insecure," from Green Day's monument to mallpunk entropy, "Jesus of Suburbia," is not a bad place to start a discussion of a band that does their darnedest to alloy Deftones with Thursday at a time when "mall culture" is still alive and well, but only on the internet- thriving in the form of image macro moodboard / "starter packs" and in the dreams of goth girls once they've tucked their wings in for the night. It's insane that a group like Post Heaven out of Melbourne can sound so spiritually akin to so many alt. chart climbers from an era where tracking charts and finding a band's t-shirt on the wall at Hot Topic meant that they had really "made it," and it makes me feel a little insecure reaching that far back into the vault of my recollection to retrieve ancient cultural context to make sense of their music from an epoch when I was seriously considering lifestyle choices such as acquiring a lip ring and wearing eyeliner to family functions to prove my iNDiVIdUALitY (thankfully, wisdom prevailed on both fronts). I don't know for certain how people younger than me (or anyone really) are discovering music these days (the algo is really serving up hot dog crap to me as of late, and I'm sure it's the same for others), but I'd like to think that if they had been around back in the day, that I would have seen Post Heaven's name on a flyer next to the register at a Spencer's Gifts, and had the clarity of mind to encode their name into my memory long enough to check their Myspace page when I got home. I also like to imagine that I'd have the wherewithal at that tender age to appreciate that they essentially start their EP, The Space That's In Between, with what should be the final song, "End Alone," a slow-burning, melancholic sonnet, where lamentations twirl atop a delicately paced piano melody like a flower petal on the surface of a still pond, allowing tension to build until it tumbles over into a tempest's pot of dissonant distortion and soul-rattling echoes of inner carnage and the rancor of requiem. This opener, while seemingly a purpose-built farewell, permits you to bid adieu to your inhibitions in preparation for the following track, "Basic Fault," an iron-clawed little wolverine that treats your head like a soft hill of alpine earth, cracking the seal on your dome as if it were a rotten log and burrowing into the pink peat of your insides with a martyr-making, slash-and-claw combo of interlocking grooves which make way to fill the space they've opened up with the fog of scorched bridges and a resigned, red-wet trickle of heartache. "Exit Wound" follows, and as the EP's most immediately impactful track, it punches through the thin membrane of the ledge that the previous two songs had walked you out onto, pushing you to plunge into a perilous free fall, like Alice in pursuit of the White Rabbit, only the portal you find yourself gliding down is lined with sharp protrusions of shattered memories and portraits of the happy life you never managed to attain, painful reminders of what could never be as you drift down a well of sorrow. Finally, "Hesitation Love" grants you a soft landing in a quickly emptying hourglass of quicksand that pulls you down into a confluence of claustrophobic regret and the devourment of unappeased desire. Somewhere between here and a boulevard of broken dreams, lies the hope that Post Heaven's message and sound will reach you in time to remind you of better days before the delirium of your circumstances and consumption of your contritions swallow you whole.
Tuesday, November 25, 2025
Album Review: Recovery Girl - Nausea Rave
Would you drop in on a rave where you ran the risk of being fried by a shot of skyfire juice? Do you want 50k volts of pure white energy shot through you like an express train to Shinjuku, coursing through the soft, jiggly mold that is the organ bank of your body cavity, delivered express from the local municipal power grid? I mean, OSHA violations aside, would you take the chance? For Galen Tipton, aka Recovery Girl, the answer is conspicuously clear from the album art of her EP Nausea Rave. Plug her in and let her ride the lightning! Evidently a by-product of her effort to produce a full LP for the Recovery Girl project, Nausea Rave is a gooey and galvanized, punk-infused exhibition of breakbeat soul and fluid, self-reorganizing digital-pulp that is as fretfully human as a first kiss and as coolly programmatic as a machine arm soldering hardware components in a dark factory, steered only by infrared sensors. The fleshwheel platter of your grey, goopy h(e)a(r)d drive will no doubt be spinning once the needle drops on explosive sequences like the hard-bodied, drum and bass pucker up and blow out of "Gasoline," the wryly smitten, flicker and flirt flare-up in collaboration with Diana Starshine suitably dubbed "Spark It Up," the digi-hardcore smoke and smolder Lazarus-beat spin-out "Revenant," the acid-washed shooting gallery of "Smoke Mid No Gas," and the witchy, jungle-brush shaded, warp-zone farewell of "Ghost 2 Me." Nausea Rave has enough of Thor's tequila in the ballast to defibrillate an autonomic two-step out of a partially embalmed cadaver- there is no telling what havoc prolonged exposure could inflict on a healthy human subject, but I doubt any of us will be grousing about our test-subject status as long as the beats keep poppin'- yours truly, least of all.
Sunday, November 23, 2025
Album Review: California X - Nights In The Dark
For a LONG minute there in the late '00s and early '10s, it seemed like every band wanted to be Dinosaur Jr. Now no one does. Ironically, at the start of the '90s nostalgia boom that crested in the early part of this decade, anyone worth their salt stopped wanting to sound like a band Michael Azerrad might have profiled in Our Band Could Be Your Life and moved on to greener pastures (or got an actual job, something). Maybe folks got the picture that he wasn't going to be writing an update/sequel and figured they might as well do something with the degree they spent the equivalent of a mortgage on a medium-sized family home. I learned about Amherst's California X at the tail end of the '80s-aping garage glut, because, well, that's when people were talking about them. Most critics at the time liked to treat California X as more derivative than they actually were, when in fact they were just very apt at capturing a classic sort of rock'n big hair vibe and didn't seem to put much currenty into cultivating clout in the shadows of their idols. They were a band that played, earnest to a fault, retro-sounding fuzz-imbued punk as if it had never occurred to anyone to crank your amps to 11 while spirit spear-fishing through Neil Young's back catalog before- And it worked!. As you might have guessed, the band had been dogged early on by comparisons to Dinosaur Jr., which the band often pushed back against as a superficial assessment of their sound. On their second album, Nights in the Dark (2015), California X made a conscious effort to shatter the impression that they were simply braiding chords from their indie rock forefathers' hair by adopting elements of progressive rock, Americana, and ballsy '70s arena anthems. That being said, that scuzzy SST-era, post-hardcore stomp that defined the best of J Mascis's early career can still be heard lumbering around in the background. Not surprisingly, seeing as the album was produced by Justin Pizzoferrato (who, yes, has produced records for Dino Jr., and Lou Barlow, as well as Speedy Ortiz, who were unfairly maligned at one point as the GIRL DINOSAUR JR.... critics were REALLY thoughtful and creative back in the day, I tell ya). If you're up to checking out this dusty old pick-me-up from my giddy garage rock phase, then I hope you get a kick out of the summer speedway anthem “Nights in the Dark,” with its Phil Lynott-worshipping leads, as well as the vigorous, charged and fluttery guitar sweeps of “Red Planet,” the bluesy, chops-busting guitars and naïve, indie rock charm of “Blackrazor (Pt. 2),” and the felty, distortion-wrapped, razor-toothed dirge “Summer Wall (Pt. 2).” Nights in the Dark might be California X's last album, but it was a real light at the end of the tunnel for me in the era in which it was released.



































