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Melody's Echo Chamber - "Unfold" | Album Review

Melody's Echo Chamber - "Unfold" | Album Review

Unfold is a lost album, recorded right after her debut with Tame Impala's Kevin Parker, who co-produced and played along with Prochet on the seven songs. Whatever the reasons were to delay the release of this album are irrelevant now, as all the seven tracks here show that she has her ear on the essence what psychedelic pop should sound like.

Marina Allen - "Centrifics" | Album Review

Marina Allen - "Centrifics" | Album Review

As an object in itself, the album feels utterly unstuck from time. It’s evocative of the Laurel Canyonites of the late sixties, sure, but it refuses to paint within those lines. What sets it apart are Marina Allen’s voice and the landscape which surrounds it, and it’s in the interplay of these that a third, intangible thing emerges.

Tropical Fuck Storm - "Moonburn" | Album Review

Tropical Fuck Storm - "Moonburn" | Album Review

While “Moonburn” and “Aspirin - Slight Return” would make for a stellar 7-inch, two additional cover songs really make this cassette an essential listen. Clocking in around fifteen minutes, Moonburn still captures the expansive vibes of earlier TFS albums like Braindrops and Deep States—records for a long drive down a lysergic highway.

Hellrazor - "Heaven's Gate" | Album Review

Hellrazor - "Heaven's Gate" | Album Review

Michael Falcone writes deceiving melodies reminiscent of numerous 90's era callbacks and emotional slack but with an extra bite from blurring guitar squeals or frenetic drum fills. The trio has a wit about them that is quite appealing and a sense of levity keeps everything from getting too deep into the encroaching gloom.

Alex G - "God Save The Animals" | Album Review

Alex G - "God Save The Animals" | Album Review

Alex G is full of questions on God Save The Animals but intentionally avoids easy answers. It’s a record filled with anxiety but finds solace in the fractured nature of change. It’s a record with a whole lot of references to God but finds sanctification in the chaos rather than the structure of religion.

They Are Gutting A Body of Water & A Country Western - "An Insult to the Sport" | Album Review

They Are Gutting A Body of Water & A Country Western - "An Insult to the Sport" | Album Review

They Are Gutting a Body of Water and fellow Philly band A Country Western throw a barrage of different sounds at the listener and all of them stick. This five song split is ambitious in its transitions between styles and continues in the same vein as TAGABOW’s 2021 split EPCOT, which oscillated between shoegaze and breakcore.

Yucky Duster - "III" | Album Review

Yucky Duster - "III" | Album Review

Having played their final show on September 18th, Yucky Duster should be remembered as one of the most happy-go-lucky, ambitiously melodic, and vocally harmonic bands today. They created a brand of twee-pop with genuine fun – like conversational rants in between verses fun – along with utterly standalone and versatile melodies.

Tan Cologne - "Earth Visions of Water Spaces" | Album Review

Tan Cologne - "Earth Visions of Water Spaces" | Album Review

Earth Visions Of Water Spaces is grounded in an elemental ethos while retaining the band’s likeness for entertaining celestial questions. As on their previous showing, they again display a knack for transforming simple phrases into hypnotic mantras and restrained instrumental passages into tempered progressions of mystifying proportion.

Judy And The Jerks - "Music To Go Nuts" | Album Review

Judy And The Jerks - "Music To Go Nuts" | Album Review

Judy and the Jerks have survived long-distance communication and being in numerous other bands to release their second LP. Despite half of the band moving to Atlanta mere months before COVID hit, they’ve stayed the course with a few tape releases between now and their previous LP release, Friendships Formed in the Pit.

Young Jesus - "Shepherd Head" | Album Review

Young Jesus - "Shepherd Head" | Album Review

The near-28 minute album is the latest in a more maverick, singular-songwriter emphasis. This is not exactly a self-conscious decision or predetermined outcome. It’s just that the 4-piece that refined each other and the improvisational methodology reached a limit, perhaps a temporary one. It’s still one that finds Rossiter solo.

Ismatic Guru - "II" | Album Review

Ismatic Guru - "II" | Album Review

With the generic iPhone alarm at the top of the first track setting the tone, Ismatic Guru’s II is the embodiment of waking up too early and your whole breakfast sticking to the pan. Six minutes of spastic but locked-in grooves with lyrics— when you can process them— that sound a lot like vignettes of drug use but when you look closer, aren’t.

Built to Spill - "When The Wind Forgets Your Name" | Album Review

Built to Spill - "When The Wind Forgets Your Name" | Album Review

When the Wind Forgets Your Name sees Oruã’s Le Almeida and João Casaes tag in to inform a new outlook. Martsch is still the ringleader, but the involvement of the Brazilian psych jazz duo slightly shifts the perspective. This is the trippiest offering from the band since Perfect From Now On.