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Neil Young - "Harvest" (50th Anniversary Edition) | Album Review

Neil Young - "Harvest" (50th Anniversary Edition) | Album Review

Debuting in 1972, a year after the infamous 1971 year in music, Harvest was this country’s number one selling album of that year, and has remained Neil Young’s signature and most referenced album. It came off the heels of the first hiatus of Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young, with the success of Harvest coming as a surprise to Neil himself

EIEIEIO - "Gentlemen Stop!" | Album Review

EIEIEIO - "Gentlemen Stop!" | Album Review

Over the past few years, and a couple of EPs, Western Mass based trio EIEIEIO have been wielding their warped and wild noise punk mayhem, careening around gang vocals aided by jazzy freak outs, aided by math-rock flourishes. They continue to gel and deliver tastes of their world in a progressively intriguing manner with "Gentlemen Stop!"

Fievel Is Glauque - "Flaming Swords" | Album Review

Fievel Is Glauque - "Flaming Swords" | Album Review

Fievel is Glauque is led by Ma Clément and Zach Phillips, backed by an expert crew of musicians. Flaming Swords transports you back in time to a bizarro Parisian nightclub, where jazzy guitar chords mix with prog-rock licks, smooth saxophones squeal with angular bursts, shuffling drums flirt with breakbeat rhythms, and sultry vocals hypnotize.

Vivi Milne - "Solstice" | Album Review

Vivi Milne - "Solstice" | Album Review

All you can learn about Vivi Milne online is that she’s from Sacramento and that she’s released six albums so far, of which Solstice is the latest. That can be a double-edged sword if the music isn’t up to a scratch. Luckily for Milne and her listeners, her concept works, and it shrouds her persona, as well as her art, in a bit of a veiled mystery.

Chat Pile - "Tenkiller Motion Picture Soundtrack" | Album Review

Chat Pile - "Tenkiller Motion Picture Soundtrack" | Album Review

What is most exciting about this endeavor is what it might say about the band’s future, through the foreshadowed new directions. There are nods to industrial and ambient music on “Bleeding Out,” shades of emotive post-rock on “Kids,” straight up death metal on “Punishment Box” and even subtle hyper-pop influence on “TAH”.

June McDoom - "June McDoom" | Album Review

June McDoom - "June McDoom" | Album Review

The mingling of June McDoom’s distinct voices, as they blend with and overtake each other, is enjoyably discombobulating. It sets the tone for a daring and lovely debut EP that doesn’t just bounce between polarities, but actually unfixes them. This isn’t an acoustic, stripped-down-and-turtlenecked kind of debut.

The Flaming Lips - "Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots (20th Anniversary Deluxe Edition)" | Album Review

The Flaming Lips - "Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots (20th Anniversary Deluxe Edition)" | Album Review

There are 100 tracks on this reissue, including demos, covers, remixes, alternative mixes, live tracks, story telling, helium voices, and even Sponge Bob. Without going into the weeds of every track, the most interesting ones are the demos. These demos are obviously real and raw, but they also show us how the Yoshimi sausage was made.

Soft Blue Shimmer - "Love Lives In The Body" | Album Review

Soft Blue Shimmer - "Love Lives In The Body" | Album Review

The latest tracks show audible signs of softer edges than before, flattered by classic shoegaze structures. Love Lives in the Body is a very honest and relatable album as it portrays the spinning feelings of emotional-awareness, the struggle of self-love, and the concept of bordering on the thin line between optimism and delusion.

Red Scarves - "Ghost Hunter" | Album Review

Red Scarves - "Ghost Hunter" | Album Review

Chicago’s Red Scarves take an imaginative and subversive take on clean cut guitar rock. The immensely talented four piece always seem to reach their destination, but they are intent on taking the scenic route to get there. A winding passage, a turn of phrase; the band chases down beauty taking the long way home.

Rider/Horse - "Feed 'Em Salt" | Album Review

Rider/Horse - "Feed 'Em Salt" | Album Review

One of the few silver linings of the lockdown was the formation of Rider/Horse, a pairing of Kingston, NY musicians Cory Plump (Spray Paint) and Chris Turco (Trans Am), whose chugging, electro-noise debut was one of the finest albums of 2021. The band returns with a more dense, varied and fully-formed LP, Feed ‘Em Salt.

Weyes Blood - "And In The Darkness, Hearts Aglow" | Album Review

Weyes Blood - "And In The Darkness, Hearts Aglow" | Album Review

Mering once again achieves the magic of Titanic Rising on her fifth album And In the Darkness, Hearts Aglow. Addressing it as the second in a trilogy, it feels like the earthly successor to its watery predecessor. We’re no longer swimming in an ocean with our fears above sea level: we’ve risen to the shore and have to live alongside them.

Horse Lords - "Comradely Objects" | Album Review

Horse Lords - "Comradely Objects" | Album Review

Comradely Objects is arguably the most platonic release of the quartet's quintessential style they have concocted to date; everything falling in its right place doing exactly what music is supposed to. The sound on these seven cuts accomplishes a task the band has been inching towards and actively ace.

Full Of Hell - "Aurora Leaking From An Open Wound" | Album Review

Full Of Hell - "Aurora Leaking From An Open Wound" | Album Review

Full of Hell is back if only for a brief moment, six minutes and 44 seconds to be exact, with what was a tour-exclusive EP, Aurora Leaking from an Open Wound. For what this release lacks in length, it more than makes up for it with intensity, noise, and riffs, an excellent addition to Full of Hell’s catalog of death metal-influenced grindcore.

Nightshift - "Made Of The Earth" | Album Review

Nightshift - "Made Of The Earth" | Album Review

With the Glasgow, Scotland collective Nightshift, it seems we can actually talk about both intellectual lyrics and music. The band only started in 2019, comprising four musicians already playing elsewhere - Eothen Stearn, Chris White, Andrew Doig, and Georgia Harris. We encounter that intellectual tag right from the start.

Smirk - "Material" | Album Review

Smirk - "Material" | Album Review

Ten tracks of tangled, anxious but melodic punk, Material is the latest from Smirk, the solo project of Los Angeles guitarist Nick Vicario (Public Eye, Crisis Man). The followup to two 2021 releases, the album typifies the punchy, lo-fi aesthetic of the Feel It roster, while embracing both ‘70s-flavored rock guitar jams and jittery new wave of the ‘80s.

Delivery - "Forever Giving Handshakes" | Album Review

Delivery - "Forever Giving Handshakes" | Album Review

Melbourne’s Delivery evolve their sound and vibe with debut album Forever Giving Handshakes. Channeling wiry post-punk as much as psyched-out garage and hooky power-pop, Handshakes rides a wavering line between tightly-wound momentum and raucous partying, the result a collection of nervy, shout-along earworms.

Tony Molina - "In The Fade" | Album Review

Tony Molina - "In The Fade" | Album Review

Hearing new Tony Molina albums, such as his latest, In the Fade, brings me back to being a teenager, fully immersed in Weezer's Blue Album, the Beatles, and pumped to hear and learn more, setting off exploratory paths to underground bands. His music is a modern day starting point of “the good shit”.