Sunday, March 31, 2024
Album Review: Hey, ily! - Psychokinetic Love Songs
Saturday, March 30, 2024
Album Review: Regulate - Regulate
Friday, March 29, 2024
Album Review: Tall Black Guy & Ozay Moore - Of Process and Progression
Thursday, March 28, 2024
Album Review: Oliver Ghoul - The Big Reveal EP
Spring Colors Challenge - Day 28: Butterscotch*
When Oliver Ghoul isn't improving lives as a physician up in Montreal, he's saving souls with his music... Ok, maybe that's taking it a little far, but his debut, ostentatiously dubbed, The Big Reveal EP, is pretty damned good! Almost suspiciously good. What kind of deal did Mr. Ghoul have to strike with an unscrupulous devil to come to possess such prowess on the guitar? Hopefully, it wasn't anything that would compromise his professional ethics! Although, if it did, he could probably woo the disciplinary committee with a string of fat-bottom riffs that could convince them to let him off easy. Oliver's got this impeccable funky sense of rhythm that gives the groove of each of his songs an exhilaratingly bumpy terrain, making you feel like you're on a rollercoaster with a loose wheel, giving you an extra, unexpected jolt while coasting around the bend or dropping down an incline. While roughly describable as psychedelic, the EP feels just as indebted to a spacy schema of future rock that overlays well with southern blues chords and goes down smoothly like a spiked ice tea on a hot afternoon. Oliver could have kept this savory jar of jams to himself, having another life and career and all, but I'm thankful that he decided to tip his hand and let his gooey, fantasies spill out all over the internet instead.
Wednesday, March 27, 2024
Album Review: Gulfer - Third Wave
What is a "Gulfer"? Is it, A) a semi-aquatic mammal, similar in appearance to a seal, but with closer set eyes and a bit of a comical overbite, B) a retired gentleman who left his wife to live in a shack and practice his stroke with a 9 iron along the cost of the Seno Mexicano, or C) a Canadian band who released their fourth LP titled Third Wave with Topshelf Records on February 28 of 2024. I'm going to level with you, chief; there was a point in my life when I couldn't have answered this question. That time has passed, though. Not to spoil things for you, but if you're not on the up and up Re: Gulfer**, now's the perfect time to get familiar. While treading purposely in a very familiar cross-section of 4th-wave emo, shoegaze, and Pup-y-loving pop-punk, Gulfer really manages to catch the ear in surprising ways. One such brilliant penchant is the tendency to "theme" certain aspects of their songs to add a charming layer of ironic emphasis to their meaning and take full advantage of the medium's form. What do I mean by this? Well, for example, there is the track "Cherry Seed," where the lyrics express feelings of being overwhelmed and weighed down by future fears- particularly, there is a verse that reads, "as the sea fills / up with strange chemicals / we all wanna change but it's difficult / and we're mostly water anyway," and is sung in a washy, drifting lilt, as if the band was literally being carried out to sea while reciting these lines, a delivery that works in damning harmony with the white-capped waves of MBV-radiated distortion that waft off its guitar chords like smoke billowing up from the roof of a burning house- it's the kind of fire you could drown in. Then there is the overheated, pickup-press of "Too Slow," ironically one of the faster tracks on the album, rough riding rocket of a track that handsprings into a break-beat interlude of its finale as if to emphasize the absolute dissociation and provable suspicions expressed by the singer as he races against a world that threatens to leave them behind in its relentless, noxious whirl. Lastly, I'll direct you to "Vacant Spirit" whose mist-tinted, rubber-walled chords contain a strange guest in the form of a wistful shade of guilt- a stubborn spectral caller which the protagonist of the song attempts to ward off with repeated pleas of "I know, I know, I know..." saying as if he were thumbing through the beads of a rosary, pursuing unearned absolution, only to be swallowed by the spectator and dropped unmoored into a merciful haze of nostalgic splendor, indicating a kind of reconciliation with the object of his dread. As I hope I've made clear, Gulfer has put an incredible amount of care and forethought into this record, which, beyond any aesthetic twists, flat-out rocks as hard as you'd expect a record to by a group who counts Hotline TNT and Prince Daddy and the Hyena as their simultaneous peers and influences. Catch this wave while it's cresting, or get left high and dry!
Only the best from Topshelf Records.
Tuesday, March 26, 2024
Album Review: Fujiya & Miyagi - Fujiya & Miyagi
Spring Colors Challenge - Day 26: Mint*
Fujiya & Miyagi's has more recent albums, but their 2017 self-titled crests above any other high-tide marker they've otherwise washed over. I've always felt Fujiya & Miyagi has received short shrift from the music press, likely because of the tendency of critics to compare them to the significantly less consistent but highly acclaimed LCD Sound System. True, they're also one of those indie bands from the '00s who stressed the pop potential of kosmische musik and dry, post-punk infused funk, but they're definitely a modern rock band first and pastiche second. The irony and nostalgia are there, but so are unsurpassable melodies, unbeatable grooves, and a will to bend time and space to meet people on level, sure-footed terrain. I'm glad that they made the move to give their sixth a self-titled** moniker as the group was well into their career when it dropped, but it feels they're truly in love with the material, and the record sees them playing like they've got nothing but their enthusiasm and something to prove to carry them into the future. It comes across as very fresh and sharp, like the band is carving up new territory and planting a flag in it as if it were their own demesne. They'd essentially lived a full life before this album, and another after its release, but their self-titled still feels like the moment when they really found their stride.
Monday, March 25, 2024
Album Review: Daymé Arocena - Alkemi
Sunday, March 24, 2024
Album Review: Voice Actor - Sent from my Telephone
Saturday, March 23, 2024
Album Review: S.C.A.B. - S.C.A.B.
noun
Friday, March 22, 2024
Album Review: Aaron C Schroeder - Entertaining Night Friends
Thursday, March 21, 2024
Album Review: Pink & Yellow - Outside
Wednesday, March 20, 2024
Album Review: Ellen May - A Lonely Way To Go
Tuesday, March 19, 2024
Album Review: Daiistar - Good Time
Monday, March 18, 2024
Album Review: Lanayah - I'm Picking Lights in a Field...
Sunday, March 17, 2024
Album Review: Nervus - The Evil One
There is a funny and frustratingly perennial discourse as to whether or not "rock" is dead. Granted, it's not as easy for rock bands to reach the level of success that once appeared plausibly attainable by even mediocre talents, due to a variety of factors, including media consolidation, changes in distribution, advances in technology, and plain old shifts in public taste, but the fact remains that the as much talent exists today to craft and perform fun and engaging four-on-the-floor bangers as there has been. Case in point: the band Nervus, whose 2022 album The Evil One is on par with the outpoint of any alternative rock band from the golden days of the '80s through the '90s. While their named influences run the gambit from rappers like Joey Bada$$ to crust kings Crass, in execution, their performance embodies an infectiously catchy merger of strummy folk punk and consciously melodious and mature indie rock in the vein of XTC or Manic Street Preachers- sort of like a version of the Hold Steady that really understands and mirrors the endlessly enduring popular appeal of a band like Pulp. Their album, The Evil One, might be named for the pejoratives projected on the group for their specific queer identities and orientations, but the truth is that if you believe in rock 'n roll, Nervus is your consummate ally, champion, and confidant.
Feel good with Get Better Records.
Saturday, March 16, 2024
Album Review: Petra Hermanova - In Death’s Eyes
Friday, March 15, 2024
Album Review: Conjunto Primitivo - Morir y Renacer
Thursday, March 14, 2024
Album Review: Born Days - My Little Dark
Spring Colors Challenge - Day 14: Blue*
In the cold, damp, dead of night, a voice can be heard. A disembodied vapor that speaks in a spectral cadence of legendary galleries of desire and sweet despair that spread out below the city like the roots of a great, invigorated forest. Shifting to suit the wishes of its inhabitants, it is like a nest of tranquil vipers whose gullets unfurl into dens of unknown pleasures. This fay voice and the spirit that commands it is known as Born Days, or as she is often referred to during the daylight hours, Melissa Harris. The debut LP from this outré, gothic-priestess, is titled, My Little Dark, a sonic atlas that guides the listener through a colorfully penetrating passage of serenely gothic ambiance, downcast dance beats, and severely contoured, dreamwave textures. A secret garden of escape, a deliberate space of disappearance, where one may decamp from the world they are forced to inhabit, and break through to the one where they were meant to belong. A warrant to walk amongst the mists of a dark deliverance like a sovereign of a lost kingdom, tasting in this protective shrowd of shadows, the ambrosia of her former eminence.
Wednesday, March 13, 2024
Album Review: Ossuarium - Living Tomb
You could find cheaper fare than 20 Buck Spin, but I wouldn't recommend it?
* Every day I am writing a fresh album review inspired by a different color and will continue to do so for the entire month of March (don't try to stop me!) Today's color nordic is an unnaturally dark and cool shade of blue, a hue that seemed to fit the feel of a haunted tomb as snuggly as an undead fist in a rusted gauntlet.
Tuesday, March 12, 2024
Album Review: Tekla Peterson - Heart Press
Monday, March 11, 2024
Album Review: Oren Ambarchi - Shebang
Sunday, March 10, 2024
Album Review: Ragana - All's Lost
Revisiting Ragana's All's Lost is like going through old photos and finding one that you don't remember having been taken. At least that's the way it feels to me, and it brings back a lot of memories. Some good. Others not so much. All's Lost dropped at a time when I was in a transitionary period in my life. I had been moving around a lot and having to start my life over from scratch ever couple of months. On top of that, I had finally decided to give heavy metal a try after having actively avoided it for years. I didn't understand what I was hearing on All's Lost then, but it seemed like it was coming from a deep, aching place. Its starkness and rough agitation seemed like a total scandal, but there was something about it that was altogether natural and familiar as well. Needless to say, I wasn't scared off. I recently checked out the group's latest LP, Desolation's Flower, which they released last year through The Flenser, and it prompted me to follow up with the 2022 remaster of the band's debut. The contrast between the releases is undeniable, with their most recent album finally reaching the summit of form they embarked on as early as 2013's Unbecoming. But recognizing their diverging paths doesn't cause a reencounter with their origins to be any less vindicating. All's Lost is still unique, even amongst black metal bands who have fully embraced the shoe-polish admiring, Ulver aestheticist click who attained grudging acceptance in the wake of Sunbather. Their outlier amongst outsiders status is owed to the fact that the duo of Maria Stocke and Coley Gilson bring a kind of witchy, love-punk energy to pine-dwelling, rain-soaked, American third-wave black metal, normally associated with groups like Wolves in the Throne Room- a kind of vibe you'd expect from a Kill Rock Stars signee, rather than somebody who'd know about, let alone have a favorite album by, Panopticon. There are even parts of All's Lost that almost give me a glimpse of what might have happened had Bratmobile given themselves a corpse-paint make-over and decided to devote their lives to furnishing free musical therapy and emotional counseling to bats and other nocturnal creatures. There is a beguiling manner in which Maria and Coley approach the material and songwriting on this release that is playful, even naive. Like a youth running into the woods to gather ingredients for a potion without any clear idea of what they're looking for, nor the intended effect of the concoction they aspire to brew- they are simply being called by the abundance of nature to seek out its secrets, leaving their imagination to fill in the gaps as necessary. It may begin with make-believe, but the lessons that are learned through the amusement of exploration can become the foundation for rituals and a formidable command of one's environment in later years. After all, the basis of all magic is the belief that the unreal can become tangled, that all that is there is not apparent from the surface, and that there are depths beyond the veil that the vessel of this world cannot expect to contain. Similarly, there is something irreducible about All's Lost, that, in defiance of its simplicity, remains captivating even as the duo define their legacy and shape their fate elsewhere. The album doesn't stand in the shadow of their later work, as much as in its only dark arena of reverie.
Saturday, March 9, 2024
Album Review: I AM - Beyond
Baptized in possibility and spirit, Beyond in multi-reedsman Isaiah Collier and percussionist Michael Shekwoaga Ode's interchange with producer Sonny Daze as an exercise in opening a portal through sound into a clearance point through which the immaterial can be grasped just as one may pluck an apple from a tree. Their collaboration is coined I AM as the jazz player's consciousness is meant to overlap and overextend into one another through the consummation of their exchange. Concentrated by tears from the sky and the rotation of sentinal spheres above, Michael's exhaustive drum work and Isaiah's lightning-fast, accelerative outbursts, tape and transform the flush hues of life and the full cast of quotidian sensations as if one were pulling a rainbow through the eye of a needle to mend the tatters of one's soul. If there is a place altogether outside this provincial plain that is knowable to human intelligence, then Isaiah and Michael may have succeeded in prying off the seal to a degree sufficient to glimpse the first tier of its venerated depths.
Come together with Division 81 Records.
Friday, March 8, 2024
Album Review: Snag - Death Doula
Thursday, March 7, 2024
Album Review: The Patterns - The Patterns Pop!
The Patterns are probably the best match for a contemporary Slumberland Records signee, who are not actually signed to Slumberland Records. The Patterns Pop! is their only LP to date, having dropped in 2020, however the band is fairly active, releasing a scattering of singles since and continuing to play shows on a semi-regular basis. As you'd expect, the group has a warm, jangly sound that hits this instant saturation point between nostalgia and timelessness that seems to cut through all contemporary trends while embodying the best qualities of pop music all at once. They've also managed to cultivate a permeating, dreamy aura, which is suitably surreal and appropriate to much of the sometimes bizarre subject matter of the songs. Think Posies drunk on the nectar of a daydream or Peel Dream Magazine taking The Byrds's advice and following the Tambourine Man wherever his whim may guide them. They're catchy as a cold to boot! Nothing should burst your bubble so long as you've got some of their clever turns floating around in the ol' attic... unless you're one of those people who like to pop bubble wrap for fun, in which case, turn this LP up loud enough so that you can hear it over all the plastic bursting between your grubby little fingers. If you're going to have multiple pastimes, you might as well try and stack them!