Post-Trash's Best of 2023 | The Mid-Year Report
Shana Cleveland Brings "Manzanita" to New York City | Live Review
On the first leg of touring behind her new full-length Manzanita, Shana Cleveland and her band played the Mercury Lounge and Sultan Room on April 21st and 22nd, with support from MAITA. In the live transmuting of its studio sound, Manzanita’s fractal sensations were ingeniously amplified—bursting into exciting new dimensions, cosmic and otherwise.
ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Shana Cleveland - "Manzanita"
Shana Cleveland described her third solo record, Manzanita, as “a supernatural love album set in the California wilderness,” a succinct description that sets both scene and mystifying tonality. The natural essence of the woods, mountains, rolling hills, and open skies, are apparent not from setting but from sound.
Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (February 20th - February 26th)
Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (January 30th - February 5th)
Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (January 9th - January 15th)
Shana Cleveland - "Night of the Worm Moon" | Album Review
Maybe it’s because of the title, but this most recent record feels like the flip-side contraposition to the sunny, surf ambience that surf tunes usually convey. Night of the Worm Moon conjures images of an empty beach beneath a bright and starry sky while soft winds gently blow ocean waves to a foamy shore.
Post-Trash's Best of 2019 | The Year In Review
The time to catch up on the unabridged Post-Trash “Year In Review” has come, with releases big and small - albums that went under the radar, the hidden gems, and the essential records from the past twelve months, even a few “buzz” bands and beyond. This is our comprehensive guide to our favorite releases of the year without a pre-determined length.
Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (July 22nd - August 4th)
"The Post-Trash 60" | Our Favorite Albums of 2019's First Half (A Mid-Year Report)
“The Post-Trash 60” is a guide to some (60) of our favorite releases so far with a diverse range of rock music’s many sub-genres and hip-hop, from extreme metal to lo-fi bedroom pop and all that falls between. We’ve got “buzz bands” worth the buzz, self-released hidden-gems, all the weird international post-punk and noise rock you could ever want, and of course all the artistic punk influenced indie we know and love.