Release Roundup 3/10/23

Release Roundup 3/10/23

 

Each week a ton of new music comes out, and between our weekly singles column that gets posted every Friday, and the full album reviews throughout the week, plus live show reviews and news announcements, we get to a lot! Here’s a quick fire list of even more great albums and EPs that came out this week(ish) that we dug and think you should get on your radar too.

 

Bard's Flying Vessel

Bard’s Flying VesselNightfall Generator. The latest from the Brooklyn based group and like their eponymous 2021 debut, the music on this new album finds this five-piece band throwing various styles into the mix and producing a sound that’s all their own. Equal parts psych rock, lo-fi fuzzy garage rock, surf rock, 60’s folk vibes yet at times heavy as hell. “Scheming” is a big stand out for me and other highlights include “Barrows,” “Fortune Wheel,” and the title track. If I had a car I’d wanna blast this as I drive, windows down. Check out our recent coverage of their release show. [KM]

 

Ben Kweller

Ben KwellerSha Sha Deluxe. To celebrate its 20th anniversary (or 23rd or 21st depending on which version we’re talking about), Ben Kweller has released a deluxe edition of his debut album, Sha Sha. The album has been remastered and includes all of the original tracks you know and love plus an additional 22 demos, live cuts, B-sides and other rarities including the lo-fi “I Have the Power,” which was released as an early single. (As a fellow 1981 baby and nerd, I see and love the 80s reference in this title.) The album is available now on the standard formats—triple LP, triple CD and DSPs—plus, for those of us who like to combine our dental hygiene with our indie rock, a USB toothbrush you can scrub your plaque away with and then plug into your computer. Pretty convenient if you ask me! Here’s hoping the 1997 album, Restraining Bolt, by Kweller’s earlier band, Radish, gets the re-issue treatment sometime soon too. [KH]

 

Frankie Rose– Love As Projection. After four years Frankie Rose is back, and continuing to explore synthpop and new wave as she did on 2017’s Cage Tropical and 2019’s Cure cover project, Seventeen Seconds. It’s a big departure from her days in fuzzy guitar bands (as the leader of Frankie Rose and The Outs and as a member of Dum Dum Girls, Vivian Girls and others) but she’s hardly the first Slumberland artist to make the jump into more Tears For Fears-inspired territory. Rose has always been good at writing a hook, and delivering them through electronic means rather than a fuzz pedal allows the intricacies of her song writing to stand out. The album starts out very catchy with “Sixteen Ways” and “Anything.” Yet much of the record sees Rose taking a more subdued approach, slowing down the beat and moving the mood from dance party to nighttime neon drive. Love As Projection is out on Slumberland Records today, and she will be performing a release show the next night at Union Pool. [CW]

 

Glitter Wizard

Glitter WizardKiss The Boot. Do you like the Seventies? I sure fucking do, and thank god Glitter Wizard does as well. This glam tinged EP features more licks than you can shake a stick at, and a David Bowie cover to top it all off. There’s glitter here to be sure, but also swagger. Glitter Wizard are obviously inspired by the bluesy psychy rock of the past, but they hit all the good notes while avoiding being too derivative. Highlights on this EP are “Sequins and Leather” and “Sugar Beat,”’ while the video for “She’s a Star” sends it all up with leather and big hair. Kiss The Boot is out right now via Kitten Robot Records. [CW]

 

The Grasping Straws Patterns. The latest from the BK indie art rockers have a brand new album out this week. Read our thoughts here. [MB]

 

H Hawkline

H. HawklineMilk For Flowers. The project of Welsh song writer Huw Evans (and frequent Aldous Harding/Cate LeBon collaborator) has just released a new album, Milk For Flowers via Heavenly. The bouncy title track kicks off the album, piano driven indie pop finery, and the next song, “Plastic Man,” continues in this vein before the third, fourth and fifth tracks bring it down a bit. “Athens At Night” is a low-key synth pop jam and one of my favorites, anchoring the middle of the album well, before it slips down into the more gentle “Like You Do,” and the album concludes with a few more somber tunes. The pacing of the album feels very intentional and I enjoyed this about it too, you can tell a lot of thought went into this as a body of work and it is not just “some songs thrown together as a collection.”

 

I admittedly was not familiar with his work at all before I met him at Webster Hall when I worked Aldous Harding‘s show there last year (he is a member of her backing band and also opened the show), so this is the first time I’ve sat down with his music more in depth. I should definitely remedy that as he has four more solo albums and numerous collaborations to dig into. I was surprised none of the songs here were sung in Welsh (as he told me that is actually his native tongue and he didn’t learn to speak English until he was primary school aged) but perhaps there may be more in his back catalog I’m not yet aware of; I look forward to taking some time to do that. He is also a graphic designer and gifted me a beautiful hand printed linocut at that show and you can see more of his visual art on his website and albums. [KH]

 

Jeerleader I’m Fine Until I’m Not. A brand new four song EP from Brooklyn’s own dream pop quartet, Jeerleader. This follows up 2020’s But It’s Fine and I think maybe they’re trying to tell us something…everything is not fine…but I also think we all already knew that. This is a fun one and shows off the groups pop sensibilities nicely. “Keanu Reeves Saves The Planet” is a particular stand out with really cool bass and lead guitar work and “Ghost World” is a bouncy jam that will stick in your head like glue. [KH]

 

Meet Me @ The Altar

Meet Me @ The AltarPast // Present // Future. I famously am not much of a fan of pop punk or emo, but there are, as they say, exceptions to every rule. Meet Me @ The Altar definitely thawed a bit of my long standing iciness towards these genres ever since I saw some early videos of them (though I can still take a hard pass on just about 99.5% of the rest of those genres as a whole) and I have always been impressed with their exceptional musicianship and the prowess they bring to their songs, even when they were starting out as teens. And never mind the fact of how absolutely refreshing it is to see a band making pop punk without yet another boring white man or his “feelings” in sight.

 

They have released a series of singles and EPs over the years and this week hit the world with their full length debut, Past // Present // Future, now mature masters of their craft. The production here is huge, more pop than punk really, but their strong chops as musicians is still very much the glue that holds this band together, big budget recording or not. Songs like “Try,” “Same Language,” and “It’s Over For Me” are super fun that will keep you bouncing while “King of Everything” is a relatable anthem I really dug, with lyrics about just wanting to catch a damn break for once—been there, felt that. While I’m not likely to be found at Emo Nite or a pop punk show any time soon, this is a fun one that definitely had lots to sink my teeth into. [KH]

 

Snayx

SnayxWeaponized Youth: Part 1. This band has been one of my biggest surprises of 2023. I saw their name on a flyer for UK snark punk band Panic Shack‘s recent tour and decided to look them up. (Truth be told, I find lots of great bands this way, just looking at show flyers for bands I already like and doing a little digging.) Their song “Work” was my first intro and I was immediately hooked on the snotty ode to fucking off and telling your boss to shove it. I love bass and drums rock bands and I love fast paced irreverent songs, so I really took a shine to that one. “Deranged” is in a similar spirit of being wild and out of control, and that was most of what I knew of this band before the full EP came out. (Other than “Buck” which felt like a little bit of a departure for them and I said as much in my review here.)

 

But all, as it turns out, is not as it seems and this band has a lot of nuance beyond the brashness presented in the two songs I initially got to know them through. On the full EP, we get to see their depth with the soulful and political “Weaponized,” which also showcases the full range of their musicianship beyond just the driving romps that initially drew me to this band (though there is certainly nothing wrong with plenty of those types of songs either, I bloody love them). As I said, “Buck” is a bit more on the subdued side, and “Body Language (She Could Read My)” splits the difference and also features some super cool, slick bass work. 

 

Every song on this five song debut is a winner and it’s been a while since I’ve heard an EP that nails it all the way through with nothing that can be called “filler” in the bunch. l also really love the cover art here, courtesy of artist Georgie Ramsay, it pairs very nicely with the title of the EP and I just love collages in general. This is a band I definitely have very high up on my list to see live and really hope they either get over to the States soon, or my next trip to the UK will coincide with one of their shows. Even better, I hope both happen! [KH]

 

Tired RadioLousy, thanks. The melodic mid-tempo hard rock band made up of “1 big guy, 1 small guy and 2 medium guys,” have just released their latest EP, Lousy, thanks, which is the follow up to their 2020 album, Patterns. The EP builds off the strength of lead single “Old Keys,” which has been making the rounds following a European tour last year where they opened for The Get Up Kids in Germany. For fans of band like The Menzingers, Hot Water Music, and Jawbreaker (alternatively Sharkswimmer or Heavy Lag for local Brooklyn comparison). Other highlights are “Down In Flames” and the title track. These are six catchy songs you’re going to want in your ears as the winter thaw beings to set in. [MB]

 

Check out these other recent reviews for even more new music:

Release Roundup 3/3

Single Serve 033

Single Serve 034

Black Belt Eagle Scout- The Land, The Water, The Sky

Cat Clyde- Down Rounder

Death Valley Girls- Islands In The Sky

El Ten Eleven- Valley of Fire

Gina Birch- I Play My Bass Loud

Lily Mao & the Resonaters- Human Being Animal

M(h)aol- Attachement Styles

Miss Grit- Follow The Cyborg

Pigs x 7- Land of Sleeper

Screaming Females- Desire Pathway

Quasi- Breaking The Balls of History

Yo La Tengo- This Stupid World

 

 

 

Single Serve 034

Single Serve 034

 

Hi! Hello! Here we are with some bite sized goodies and a taste of a some new things that we dug that came out in the last week (ish), quick fire responses to some great new music we think you should check out. This week a whole bunch of the crew—Chantal, Kate, Megan, Mike and Ray— weighed in on some killer songs— give ’em a listen!

 

Acid KingMind’s Eye. Seven minutes of slow burn acidic doom from the San Francisco crew, this is the latest from their upcoming album, Beyond Vision, due out on 3/24. Packed with gigantic riffs and hard hitting drums, this one makes me sad I have a crew cut because this is a hair in your eyes, vibing the fuck out stoner rock gem. [KH]

 

Angel Olsen Nothing’s Free. Forever Means, the follow up EP to Angel Olsen’s fantastic 2022 album, Big Time, is on the way and the lead single “Nothing’s Free” was released this week. A subtle and soulful piano driven contemplation, complete with lush sax accents, the song sees Olsen exploring her identity and laying it all out for the first time. The songs on the EP were recorded during the Big Time sessions but not included on that record. They are collected here with a common theme of there being “no finish line.”

 

Olsen shares in a statement:

“Forever is to remain curious, never letting yourself think you’re finished learning or exploring, while trying also to be kind and honest.” She further elaborated about this song specifically, saying it’s “about that point when self-denial breaks, and you notice how long you’ve been restraining who you are. It felt really difficult to exclude it from Big Time,” she admits, “but it felt more soulful than the direction of that record, it was coming from a different place. For me, when I wrote it, I was coming to terms with my identity and sexuality. I was opening up in a new way.”

 

Forever Means will be release on 4/14 via Jagjaguwar. Check out our recent coverage of her show at Bearsville Theater. [KH]

 

Beach FossilsDon’t Fade Away. The long running indie bedroom pop quartet have just announced their first album in six years, Bunny, and released the first single “Don’t Fade Away.” This song finds them in the rich dream pop territory that they are so deft at with band leader Dustin Payseur sharing that the song “is about missing old friends, being on tour, self-medicating, longing, anxiety, love, being an idiot, having fun, embracing your mistakes and keeping your spark.” Bunny will be released on 6/2. [KH]

 

BodywashNo Repair. The second single from Montreal post punk duo’s forthcoming second album. It’s an airy and lush song with Rosie Long Decter on lead vocals this time who shares:

“In my early 20s I found myself in a disastrous love triangle. It was a mess of bad decisions and repressed queer longing and those things you chase because you hope they will prove you are real. I found myself writing repetitively about light and air and the absence of tactility. ‘No Repair’ came from the decision to let all that go; to try to lose the shape of it. I started writing it in 2019 and finished it in 2021, letting it simmer over two years of lockdown and sitting with myself. It feels strange and sweet to be releasing it at a time when I have a new sense of ground underneath me and someone to share that feeling with.”

 

I Held the Shape While I Could due out 4/14 via Light Organ. [KH]

 

CHARMAINIA– To Us. A delicate song set to a sort of spooky video set in a cave (look, all caves are spooky). Singer Charmaine (who also helms the drums for snarky Brooklyn punk bands Nevva and The Cult of Chunk) uses lyrical repetition to build the mood, twining through and around the echoing synths beneath, until the listener is fully immersed. It’s a big departure from her work in her other projects and I’m excited to hear more. [CW]

 

Death GoalsP.A.N.S.Y. The London based mathy, screamo noise punk queercore two piece is releasing their second album in May, A Garden Of Dead Flowers, via Prosthetic and just dropped the next single “P.A.N.S.Y.” They share on their Instagram “This is a song about queer love and all the trappings that come with it,” and the song is massive, particularly the breakdown which hits like a ton of bricks after a brief subtle guitar interlude, the simultaneous feelings of queer love and rage intertwined to hit right in the heart. This is one of my most anticipated releases of the first half of 2023 and I can’t wait to hear what else they have in store. We recently featured them on our favorite 2 Piece band list, check that out here. [KH]

 

ElisapieUummati Attanarsimat (Heart of Glass cover). The Inuk artist, Elisapie, has taken Blondie’s 1979 era defining disco hit and transformed the upbeat, danceable arrangement into a gentle and subdued acoustic folk song. Additionally, she has translated the lyrics and sings them entirely in the Indigenous language, Inuktitut. A great cover song makes the original the newer artists’ own creation in a way, paying loving tribute, but putting a piece of themselves into it too. Elisapie has more than done that here, taking the groove heavy party anthem to an emotional and warm place centered around cherished childhood memories. Via a statement she shared:

“My adoptive mother was from the small village of Ivujivik. It was a 30 minute plane ride from my village. We would often go there to visit her family. Once we arrived in Ivujivik, my parents would go gambling at some random cousin’s house. I would later have mixed feelings towards their gambling addiction. But not back then.

 

Back then, it meant the children were free to do whatever they pleased. The older kids were the ones who ran the show and they knew how to throw a party. When I was around 5 or 6 years old, I remember one particular night when they put “Heart of Glass” on. They all started dancing like crazy. I watched their joy with such admiration. I couldn’t believe I got to stay up so late. I felt so loved by my maniacal babysitters. They laughed at me and swung me around. They treated me like the most beautiful doll. When this song comes on, I am back in that wonderful small dance hall of sorts with my big cousins.

 

And even though it was a tiny venue, in a tiny village, isolated from the rest of the world, in my mind, it still was the wildest crowded dance floor, in the coolest, most dynamic discotheque in the world.”

 

The results of Elisapie’s reimagining are nothing short of stunning, her voice lovely and soothing as she croons the familiar melody. I had goosebumps listening to this interpretation of a song I thought I knew so well already—a gorgeous rendition revealing vast new depths to a time honored classic. [KH]

 

FACSSlogan. The Chicago art rock outfit have released the second single from their upcoming new album, Still Life In Decay (4/7 Trouble In Mind), and once again is driven by a heavy hypnotic bassline, disjointed and big, powerful drums, coupled with a sparse and repetitive guitar line that coalesce into a song that pairs perfectly with the first single, “When You Say.” Check out our recent coverage of their show at Union Pool. [KH]

 

Florence and the MachineJust A Girl (No Doubt cover). The Yellowjackets season 2 trailer dropped this week and along with it, Florence Welch and company has lent their signature touch to the 1995 No Doubt classic, making a “deeply unsettling” version in the process which fits perfectly with the vibe of the show.

 

Welch shares:

“I’m such a huge fan of ‘Yellowjackets’ and this era of music, and this song especially had a huge impact on me growing up, so I was thrilled to be asked to interpret it in a ‘deeply unsettling’ way for the show. We tried to really add some horror elements to this iconic song to fit the tone of the show. And as someone whose first musical love was pop-punk and Gwen Stefani, it was a dream job.”

 

Mark Bowen of IDLES also produced the track. The show hits streaming on Showtime on 3/24 and I for one am very ready to dig into all of the action and drama! [KH]

 

HousewifeFuck Around Phase. I just caught this hazy indie pop group when they opened for Paolo Nutini at Brooklyn Steel and was very into what I heard. (I opened the email with this press release while sitting in the office backstage in fact. Is that what they call meta or something?) Led by singer Brighid Fry, this song is as fuzzy as it is sweet and explores the follies of youth, ah those wonderful careful “fuck around phase” days! This appears to be a stand alone single for now and follows up the 2022 EP You’ll Be Forgiven, but I’m certainly ready to hear more. [KH]

 

I Am the AvalancheHoney Bee. Brooklyn’s very own I Am the Avalanche released powerhouse punk rock track “Honey Bee” this week. Typical to their usual sound, this song comes in swinging with heavy riffs, and build ups that change direction throughout the entire two minutes and fifteen seconds.  The climax of “Honey Bee” features a nice little breakdown and some raw intense vocal work from singer Vinnie Caruana. Ending off in a half-shout of “Honey Bee!” we get a strong close to match the slow, enduring intro. If you’re looking for something that will have you in a light headbang and an adrenaline rush, this is your track! [MD]

 

Indigo De SouzaSmog. The second single from the upcoming album, All of This Will End, is a fuzzy and infectious pop nugget.

 

Via a press release De Souza shares:

“I remember writing this song during the peak of the pandemic, I was living alone on a dead-end street surrounded by neighbors who were seemingly always mowing their lawns. I remember having a lot of anxiety during the day, navigating the newly awkward and uncertain experience of doing anything mid world freak-out. I was in an emotional state that felt like a cross between delirious joy and a real tired hopelessness. Everything felt unknown and distant. ‘Smog’ is mostly about that strange time and how it felt in my house, alone. When the neighborhood was asleep, and all the lawn mowers stopped, I felt free to make anything and sing anything I wanted. It was my first time ever living alone. It brought me a lot closer to myself.”

 

All of This Will End is out 4/28 via Saddle Creek. De Souza will be performing at SXSW and will hit NYC with a show at Webster Hall on 5/24. [KH]

 

Jane LaiNot All, But A lot. A brand new single from the Brooklyn based bedroom pop artist, this one is downtempo exploration with piano and strings alongside the usual guitars, bass and drums for a sweet and lush slice of indie. Check out our recent coverage of her opening set for Kississippi at Baby’s All Right. [KH]

 

Living ThingsBeauty & Her Beat. There’s been a whole new crop of bands recently that we’ve seen popping up and permeating the NYC music scene since the return to live music following “the dark times.” One such band is Living Things who just released their debut single today.

 

The quartet features West Coast transplant Vivien Hale Morosoff (guitar, vocals), identical twins Liam (guitar) and Cameron Wright (bass), and Harrison Dolan (drums) and brings some fresh feel-good energy to what is often an angsty and brooding Big Apple rock scene. There’s a genuine sweetness in Morosoff’s voice, and a style that brushes up against country and bluegrass, but ultimately remains indie-pop rock at its core. This songs feels like a warm Georgia evening catching june-bugs at the local molasses n’ pie festival and grass between your toes. It’s like dipping your feet in the pond and holding hands under a big sky where you can actually see all the stars. 

 

But make no bones about it, despite this honeyed tone, the song itself serves to denounce all the fairytale princess tropes that society typically force feeds to little girls. It’s a song about female empowerment and carving your own path. It’s a love song that asserts it’s ok to fall head over heels without losing yourself in the process. [MB]

 

MediocrePop Song Baby. This song was described in its press release as a “wolf in sheep’s clothing” and you know, I really have to agree with that. It is a catchy banger, make no doubt about that, and it’ll have you jumping up and down with grungy 90s nostalgic abandon. It hits you with a saccharine edge particularly with the sweet vocals, but that belies the deep feeling of rage running beneath the surface of the song which addresses what it feels to be labeled “the woman” or the “angry girl band” as a musician (or otherwise) and having that be all anyone ever associates you with forevermore. (Been there, felt that, so this song really resonated with me on a deep level!)

 

Those feelings make themselves known in the snarky lyrics and the band shares “We wanted to write a song that our teenage selves would blast in our bedrooms. As femme musicians growing up in a predominantly male music scene, we pulled from our frustrations of being underestimated and pigeon-holed into certain archetypes. This song and video explores those pressures.” This is the second single from the upcoming EP To Know You’re Screwed due out 4/7 via Dangerbird. [KH]

 

Protomartyr– Make Way. With creeping verses and stun-gun choruses, “Make Way” plays with the quiet-loud dynamic in a particularly deft way before settling somewhere in the middle. Director Trevor Naud sees the accompanying music video as a followup to 2020’s “Worm In Heaven.” Protomartyr’s new album Formal Growth In The Desert, which singer Joe Casey calls “a 12-song testament to “getting on with life,” even when it feels impossibly hard” will be out June 2nd on Domino. [CW]

 

RatboysBlack Earth, WI. Chicago DIY indie punk outfit Ratboys released their first bit of new music in quite some time this week with the eight minute and change guitar driven opus “Black Earth, WI.” Opening up with a noir-like country rhythm, the first thing that came to mind when hearing this was Thunderclap Newman’s 1969 hit “Something’s In The Air.” Of course any similarities between the two songs were soon dispelled as soon as Julia Steiner’s lead vocals kick in with her high pitched crooning torching the ambiance of the tune with the words “Lighting a match // Just to freak you out // Then on the other side // I saw fifty yellow lines // Pushing up against the window // And with One almighty lightning strike // The Great Lake rose up behind // Said, ‘Baby, you best turn around.’” 

 

Steiner’s vocal presentation, despite being somewhat unique by today’s standards, reminds me a lot of mid 90’s alt-country singer/songwriter Victoria Williams. But on this one, she doesn’t get to shine for very long, as this is more of a jam than a song to be sung. That being said, Steiner certainly gets the most out of the limited words in this song. As the old saying goes, “sometimes less is more” and that is the case with the vocals on this one. What really shines however is the playing on this one. Recorded live in only two takes at Seattle’s Hall of Justice recording studio, the guitar interplay between Steiner, guitarist Dave Sagan and bassist Sean Neumann (who also fills in on some guitar on this) swells into a growing tide of fretboard distortion ala Neil Young and Crazy Horse as the jam comes to a climax.  All in all, while exuding a definitive nostalgic feel (even more so when watching the old VHS footage in the song’s video), this one also comes across as fresh and vibrant. I sure hope there’s a full LP in the offing.  

 

In the meantime for anyone making their way down to SXSW, Ratboys will be there playing a host of showcases, so please do check them out. Take a look at our coverage of their set in London opening for Julien Baker in May 2022. [RR]

 

Silver Moth– The Eternal. This slowly building post-rock tune is just what you would expect from a band featuring members of Mogwai, Abrasive Trees, and Burning House, as ethereal vocals soar over delicate and driving guitars (the cleaner guitar leads are a particular highlight for me). Elisabeth Elektra notes the track is a tribute to a friend of her and bandmate Stuart Braithwaite’s who passed away. Their new album, Black Bay, will be out via Bella Union on April 21st. [CW]

 

Snapped Ankles Planet You. I will never not love how fucking weird this band is. They are back with another cover of follow UK no wave weirdos, Blurt, which follows the previous cover “The Fish Needs A Bike” they released last fall (read my thoughts). These covers will be part of Blurtations, a limited edition release for Record Store Day and the band shares on their Instagram “We pulled the songs of legendary dadaist punks Blurt into our forest and sent them back out on a fresh record for you: the six track EP is out exclusively for Record Store Day, limited to 1200 aesthetically pleasing yellow records.”

 

I’m looking forward to hearing the entire collection though I’ll more than likely be left to hear it on streamers as, truth be told, I’m impatient and don’t tend to love waiting in RSD lines. And this way, I can add it to my UK arrival tradition, which includes listening to Snapped Ankles as I wait to have my passport checked then heading to get my first prawn mayo sandwich, picking up my bags, and jumping on mass transit to head to Wales. Check out my 2022 coverage of their NYC debut. [KH]

 

Strange RangerRain So Hard. This lonely, wistful track speaks of loss (“like a dropped call / don’t you know it’s gone for you / like a missed name / don’t you know it’s lost for you”) while remaining beautiful. Singer Isaac Eiger and Fiona Woodman’s vocals layer softly into the music and each other, creating a soft, airy tune whose synthy shoegaze sound is a new direction for the band. They’ll be at Pageant in Brooklyn on March 11th. [CW]

 

ther– impossible things. The new single from this Philly band mixes deceptively simple music with poetic lyrics and an absolutely gorgeous pedal steel guitar lead. Singer Heather Jones’ words touch on mortality (“there are impossible things that you’ll never notice… except for the one of which you are certain that ends with a dance with the dead”) but also of love (“you have a beauty that passes right through me and bounces around in my chest / it’s a great thing of wonder that I’ve been crushed under”). Their album a horrid whisper echoes in a palace of endless joy” will be out April 14th. [CW]

 

White HillsEye To Eye. The fuzzy stoner psych duo are back with a brand new single that rips and rages until it doesn’t, dropping to a mellow psychedelic breakdown around the three and a half minute mark. The song stays in this groove, while building up a bit again, for the next (almost) four minutes, for some stonerrrrr AF acid fuckin rock vibes. In a perfect pairing, they will open for Pigs x 7 at their Saint Vitus show on 3/11. [KH]

 

 

 

The Grasping Straws- Patterns

The Grasping Straws- Patterns

The Grasping Straws– Patterns

 

“Keep your arms and legs inside the spaceship. Try to keep your head straight. Enjoy the trip.”  Inspired by anti-folk and the energy of NYC basements, and filtered through the imagination of Mallory Feuer, the psych art rock band of abstract collaborators are back with new record Patterns and as the kids say these days, it fucks.

 

From the  jump, “Help” rolls right into a fast-paced thick bass chugger. My personal favorite, it’s a controlled onslaught drum attack punctuating urgency and driving a palpable and desperate vocal hunger. Alternatively, “Poetry,” has a fuzzy super feel-good chorus, and is teeming with pop-sensible hooks that will snag the corners of your mouth leaving you smiling ear to ear. While moreover there’s still that signature angsty jazzy quality I’ve come to expect from The Grasping  Straws. And you really hear the band shining in their truest element on tracks like “Enjoy the Trip” and “Home.”

 

The Grasping Straws performing

The Grasping Straws (photo by Kevin McGann)

 

The Grasping Straws always has been quite adept at remaining authentic to their roots yet at the same time evolving their nuanced sound to remain fresh. I’m a really big fan of some of these heavier grungier tunes, but at the same time, no one can make you cry with nothing more than a heartbreaking whisper quite like Mallory Feuer.

 

Patterns was self released and is available via Bandcamp and all major streamers. The band will embark on a tour to support the album, check Instagram for all dates.

 

 

 

 

Release Roundup 3/10/23

Release Roundup 3/3/23

 

Each week a ton of new music comes out, and between our weekly singles column that gets posted every Friday, and the full album reviews throughout the week, plus live show reviews and news announcements, we get to a lot! Here’s a quick fire list of even more great albums and EPs that came out this week(ish) that we dug and think you should get on your radar too.

 

Atlas Engine

Atlas Engine When the Compass Resets, There Can Be No Regrets.  As Atlas Engine singer and guitarist Nick LaFalce dealt with chronic illness (a topic he touches on in his songwriting), the band chose to release When the Compass Resets, There Can Be No Regrets as two EPs, which we covered here and here. Now the full length LP is out, with a new track at the beginning to kick things off and two new songs at the end, including the outstanding “I Never Get As Far As I Run.” These tracks are just as gorgeous and cinematic as the songs previously introduced on the EPs, and bring the halves together in a lushly produced whole. [CW]

 

Fake Names

Fake NamesExpendables. This punk rock super group is a who’s who of 80s and 90s punk and hardcore bands, featuring members of Minor Threat, Refused, Fugazi, Dag Nasty, Bad Religion, Embrace and Soulside—and that’s just scratching the surface of their impressive resume. Today, they’ve released their second album, Expendables, on Epitaph and it’s a punk power pop banger through and through. When “Delete Myself” was released as a single, guitarist Brian Baker shared “In general, Dennis [Lyxzén] writes about revolution, and Michael [Hampton] and I write pop songs. I’m amazed at how it works, but somehow it strikes the right balance of salty and sweet.” Indeed, this album has plenty of salty and sweet to go around. Catch the band in NYC on 4/14 at TV Eye. [KH]

 

Fixtures

FixturesHollywood Dog. After years of homemade tapes and EPs, Brooklyn mainstays Fixtures have finally dropped a full length album.Read our full review here. [BD]

 

Horrible TimingLate To The Party. the debut EP from the “anxious pop punk” band from Brooklyn. Read our full review here. [CW]

 

Muck

MuckDemo (2023). Scuzzy lo-fi hardcore from Richmond. This demo is a ripper and it’s over in a spartan 9 minutes and 15 seconds. You know, exactly like a hardcore demo is supposed to be! [KH]

 

O. Wake

O. WakeHead In The Cloud. This EP collects three previous released singles “Odysseus,” “Let’s All Get Pessimistic,” and “Riper Than Ripe” and now adds the brand new song “Head In The Cloud,” a song that addresses the plague of being addicted to our devices, something we can all relate to. The band will be performing at the upcoming New Colossus Festival. [KH]

 

Ron Gallo

Ron GalloForeground Music. The latest from the sardonic songsmith is out today on Kill Rock Stars. Read our full review. [KB]

 

ssold

SSOLDPassionate Horse. The sludgy Portland noise rock trio released this brand new four song EP on Valentine’s Day and it was my first intro to the band. It’s not every day the first song you get from a punk band is a song about Destiny’s Child (yes, you read that right), but I liked it so much I immediately dove head first into their previous full length, Ssolid Ggold, too. I’m a big fan of the busy drumming here, courtesy of Max, who goes hard and serves as an anchor for the heavy fuckin riffage.

 

This will give you some Big Business vibes and also reminds me a bit of Dead Arms, the fantastic (and now defunct) UK band that featured future Los Bitchos drummer, Nic Crawshaw. My only complaint is this is just four songs, I definitely would get way down with another full length from this crew, but this can hold me over for now while I wait. Passionate Horse will rattle your teeth and shake your bones, and I say, let’s get this band out to NYC ASAP so I can hear these songs live! [KH]

 

WhenwolvesRecon For The Weirdos. The debut EP from the Brooklyn art rockers. Read our full review. [MB]

 

Zulu

ZuluA New Tomorrow. The anticipated debut album from the esteemed LA powerviolence band has arrived and it packs a massive amount of heavy, hammering riffs alongside brutal basslines and blistering drums throughout. Crushers like “Where I’m From,” which features guest spots from Pierce Jordan (Soul Glo) and Obioma Ugonna (Playtime),  “Fakin’ Tha Funk (You Get Did)” and “52 Fatal Strikes” will rattle you all the way down your spine.

 

But the album isn’t all heavy, and features a wide breadth of material from soul and jazz samples interspersed as the ending of many songs, the instrumental funk interlude “Shine Eternally,” and the spoken word/piano pieces “Must I Only Share My Pain?” and “Crème de Cassis by Aleisia Miller and Precious Tucker” which asks the question “why do Black artists only have to make art about their pain?” a theme that occurs throughout the record. “We’re More Than This,” is a hip-hop song which features guitarist Dez Yusuf rhyming over relaxed, nimble jazz instrumentation. Yusef shares:

 

“When we first started writing for the record Anaiah and I had bounced the idea of maybe doing some jazz or R&B songs and putting some raps on the record,” Yusuf commented. “I know Satchel and Anaiah had jammed out some different ideas that I hadn’t really been present for. We were actually ending our tour with Sasami when I first heard the music for ‘We’re More Than This’. We were in the van at a rest stop and Anaiah played it off a video of him and Satchel jamming. It just hit me all in an instant.

 

“I didn’t think much beyond the lyrics of ‘must I only share my pain,’ which is a running theme throughout the album. But it’s ironic because I go forward with sharing glimpses of pain and trauma, but that’s really the setup to show the things I’ve (we’ve) become in spite of that pain. This is really a song of resilience and encouragement. Saying that we can still be more than the tropes that are Put on us. That we are more than commodified versions of our trauma.”

 

A New Tomorrow is a remarkable record with exceptional depth and nuance. At the end of 2023, you can be sure that this album will be on many Best of the year lists. [KH]

 

 

Check out these other recent reviews for even more new music:

 

Release Roundup 2/24

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Black Belt Eagle Scout- The Land, The Water, The Sky

Cat Clyde- Down Rounder

Death Valley Girls- Islands In The Sky

El Ten Eleven- Valley of Fire

Gina Birch- I Play My Bass Loud

Lily Mao & the Resonaters- Human Being Animal

M(h)aol- Attachement Styles

Miss Grit- Follow The Cyborg

Pigs x 7- Land of Sleeper

Screaming Females- Desire Pathway

Quasi- Breaking The Balls of History

Yo La Tengo- This Stupid World

 

 

Single Serve 034

Single Serve 033

 

Hi! Hello! Here we are with some bite sized goodies and a taste of a some new things that we dug that came out in the last week (ish), quick fire responses to some great new music we think you should check out. This week Chantal, Kate and Mike weighed in on some killer songs— give ’em a listen!

 

boygeniusNot Strong Enough. The latest single from The Record, the highly anticipated debut album from the indie rock dream super group, this one features each member taking lead vocals on a verse and some Sheryl Crow references in the lyrics. It also has a lot of rich nuance in the lush layers and production throughout. It comes paired with an adorable music video that was shot by the band members themselves and sees them horsing around and having fun at an amusement park, a museum, batting cages and more. Julien Baker also sports a Lockwood 51 shirt through much of the video and being a big fan of their radical queer work, I was stoked to see that. The Record will arrive in full on 3/31 and the band will tour behind it as part of the Re:SET concert series throughout June. [KH]

 

CrocodilesLove Beyond the Grave. A fun reverb drenched garage pop ode to finding love among the undead. The latest single from the upcoming album, Upside Down In Heaven, due out 4/7 on Lolipop Records. [KH]

 

Extra SpecialSober Karaoke. Gotta love a good bop about self-reflection, and this is a damn good one. Soaked in hook fueled synthesizer and poured over some cool electronic beat pads, Amelia Bushell has written a catchy tune perfect as we crawl our way out of these dark colder months. Also equally soaked in the booze of years past, NYC nightlife pitfalls and late night misadventures, Bushell finds maybe there’s a different life to be lived outside the substances…at least for the moment. Sometimes desperately running away from expectations leaves you chasing something far more nefarious within yourself. And sometimes you just remember how much simpler it was to be a kid. 

 

Bushell has definitely more than proven she knows how to craft a pop song and twist a slant rhyme like no one else. But this is just her beginning to understand that there is another way to exist when you become open to the limitlessness of self-love. Gotta say, it’s a little hard to argue against clear-headed thinking and balanced living. One thing is for sure, as a recovering alcoholic myself, I fucking hate sober karaoke!! [MB]

 

LaPecheMermaid Blues V1. The Brooklyn indie rockers have released an expanded version of their single “Mermaid Blues,” and the song still explores the same themes and “expands and contracts around the experience of heavy seasonal depression,” with more lushness in the backing vocals and bridge and with a different chorus. The band says they “enjoy sharing different iterations of songs when they feel it is warranted,” and I for one like to see the different ways a song can live and breathe. The band’s founding drummer, Jeff Gensterblum, has since departed the band but performs on both versions. Read my thoughts on the original here. [KH]

 

Los BitchosTequila (The Champs cover)/Trapdoor (King Gizzard cover). The tequila loving London based foursome has finally made it super official and laid down their punky, amped up version of the 1950s party classic “Tequila” by fellow instrumental band, The Champs, which has become a staple of their live set. The band shares “‘Tequila’ has been the joyfully unhinged ending to our set for the past year. It always feels like it could fall apart at any moment and we wanted to capture that energy on the recording.” There is also a fun video of the band indulging in their favorite beverage around London (which also comes with a warning to have fun but be safe) and features footage they shot themselves which was edited by their touring rhythm guitarist Charles Prest.

 

Interestingly, their version includes vocals with lyrics, provided by keyboardist Agustina Ruiz, a change from the traditional song and a first for them as a group too (other than the cheers/laughs/chants that are sometimes heard on their tracks, they have been purely instrumental). Released as a 7inch double single called Pah! (which sold out on Bandcamp on the day of release), the flipside is their cover of King Gizzard’s “Trapdoor,” another usual suspect in their live set and perfectly timed as they are kicking off a tour support King Gizz in Europe before they head to the US for a string of dates including a stop at Brooklyn Made on 5/2. Check out pics from their NYC show last June here, and pics from Ritual Union in Bristol, England, here. [KH]

 

Mandy, Indiana Pinking Shears. The second single from the upcoming debut album, i’ve seen a way, is led by the beat, both electronic and acoustic drums, while Valentine Caulfield chants in French above the occasional punctuations of fuzz and shrieking guitar. The record is out 5/19 on Fire Talk Records. The band will soon make their US debut at SXSW. [CW]

 

Noble Rot Casting No Light. Alex Edkins of METZ has been busy lately with a lot of things outside of his main project, his other band Weird Nightmare put out their debut album last year and now he is making music with Graham Walsh of Holy Fuck in their project Noble Rot. This will sound a lot closer to Holy Fuck and METZ, a cool electro groover that will keep your head bobbing. The duo announced their debut album, Heavenly Bodies, Repetition, Control which will be out on March 24 via Joyful Noise Recordings. [KH]

 

OmatRail Reload/The Fool. After recently releasing their debut single, “Daisy” (read our thoughts), the brand new band is back with a pair of singles—”Rail Reload” released last week and “The Fool” released this week. Much like I said about the previous song, “Rail Reload” too meets right at the intersection of post-punk, indie and gritty shoegaze, perfectly melding the styles. “The Fool” isn’t far off either, though this one brings out a sugar coated grunge feel. This band started out with a bang, quickly opening for alt grunge luminaries L7 last fall (see coverage) and I can see more big things in their future. Make it out to a show to catch them live as soon as you can. [KH]

 

Scowl Shot Down. The second single from Scowl’s upcoming EP, Psychic Dance Routine, their firmly back in hardcore waters after exploring a more alt rock direction on the previous single “Opening Night,” but actually…not so fast. While the verses are solidly hardcore, the choruses dip back into the seas of alternative and I love the push and pull and how seamlessly they blend them together. The EP will release in full on 4/7 via Flatspot Records and the band is currently on tour with Show Me The Body, Jesus Piece, Zulu, and TRiPP Jones; the tour hits Brooklyn Steel on 3/24. [KH]

 

Shybaby For Rent. Settling down? In this economy? This fast-paced punk tune is scuzzy and catchy and accompanied by a Craigslist-themed video, seemingly drawing a comparison between fleeting hookups and short term rentals. Too bad they took out the personals, right? [CW]

 

Slow Pulp– Cramps. After releasing their debut album in 2020, Slow Pulp have signed to Anti, and their latest single is definitely a bop, a noisy buzzy pop tune with clattering percussion and vocals mixed into the fuzz, quiet at times and clippingly loud at others. They’ll be touring with The Pixies and Death Cab For Cutie over the next few months. [CW]

 

Tami HartSorry For Your Heart. I’m a long time fan of Hart’s work and am delighted she’s back to releasing solo music for the first time in many years. Read my full review here. [KH]

 

TEKE::TEKEGarakuta. The lead single from the upcoming Hagata is a thrashing sort of psychedelic march, led by Maya Kuroki’s intense vocals and a driving flute lead. It’s a fantastical, striking song, only made better by the trippy music video. The album is out June 9th on Kill Rock Stars, and you can catch them soon at Irving Plaza on March 12th opening for Unwound. [CW]

 

Tetchy Smaller/Better. The newest single by Tetchy dropped earlier this week and once again proves the band makes no bones about taking risks and leaving themselves completely exposed. Packed with emotional betrayal and a raw vulnerability, the tracks creeps and crawls thru ethereal vocal layers and dissonance like the broken rusty springs of a haunted music box. There’s a quiet anger and overwhelming sadness that permeates the crevasses and fills the cracks like old glue that hardens and holds like an old dried heart stuck pinned to your rib cage. [MB]

 

 

 

Whenwolves- Recon for the Weirdos

Whenwolves- Recon for the Weirdos

Whenwolves Recon for the Weirdos

 

I’ve been a long time fan of Bobby Lewis’s art-sound musical-projects-turned-bands, most recently the now defunct Mustardmind. So I was excited when I found out he had started a new outfit along with his brother, Billy. A little late to the game, I bumped into Lewis at a show and learned he’d started Whenwolves (a named I’d started to see popping up on live bills with bands I love at venues I frequent). We here at FTA premiered their last single (see what we said here), the mathy dreamy “The Minutes” and spent many many more minutes digging into their debut five song EP, Recon for the Weirdos.

 

Lewis explains that following the expiration of his last band during the pandemic, “picking up the pieces and starting work on new music fell solely on his shoulders, as there were no other bandmates to develop the songs with at the time” Eventually he recruited Eric Slick (of Dr. Dog) to play drums and Kristin Slipp (of mmeadows and Dirty Projectors) for backing vocals, in addition to his aforementioned brother on bass. What resulted was a new live band ready to play shows and cool quirky EP to support this new endeavor.

 

Whenwolves (photo by Michael Lefco)

 

Opening track, “Chin Up!” sets the tone of the record, employing a subtle power in its piano attack across Slipp’s ghostly backing vocals. It somehow manages to remain relatively simple in structure but feel a little mathy at the same time. The composition of elements is so good, that I stopped counting almost immediately, and my brain leaned toward the ripping guitar lines.

 

Whenwolves know how to let the beat… mmmmdrop? I’ve previously likened them to God Lives Underwater, and tracks like “Impostorium” reinforce that in a way that also brings out bits reminiscent of Radiohead’s more experimental guitar work mixed melodic choices that feel almost Incubus somehow.

 

 

But at the end of the day, I’m a sucker for a good pop song, and it’s the final track “Sugarcoat” with its mellow electric piano spine and perfectly fuzzed guitar that hooked me on Recon for the Weirdos. It’s a sweet hook infused closer that hits like sunny Sunday morning cup of coffee and goes down smooth like a dose of OkGo power pop ballad. Not quite sure in the end if they actually “sugarcoat the worst parts and leave best parts out,” but what they left for us is indeed a charmingly smart record worth peeling into.

 

Recon for the Weirdos is out now and available via Bandcamp and all major streamers.