Post-Trash Facebook Post-Trash Twitter

Tee Vee Repairmann - "What's On TV?" | Album Review

Tee Vee Repairmann - "What's On TV?" | Album Review

As Tee Vee Repairmann, Sydney, Australia’s Ishka Edmeades is making grimy, giddy punk rock for the recoverably crestfallen. Following 2021’s excellent Patterns EP, debut full-length What’s On TV? is animated by anxiety, banal bad times, and waiting—for something in particular or anything at all.

Bleary Eyed - "Bleary Eyed" | Album Review

Bleary Eyed - "Bleary Eyed" | Album Review

Indie-gazers Bleary Eyed have released their latest four track EP after signing with Born Loser Records, a Philly music staple. Bleary Eyed can be seen as an “evolved” sound as it contains familiar shoegaze undertones from the band’s prior release Guise, combining with the new EP’s indie-pop choruses and dreamy synths.

Screaming Females - "Desire Pathway" | Album Review

Screaming Females - "Desire Pathway" | Album Review

On Desire Pathway, Screaming Females pull absolutely no punches in their riffy, hard hitting approach to songwriting, with Marissa Paternoster's enigmatic, distinctly dense vocal performance taking center stage. They hold onto their powerfully driven brand of rock writing, while breaching a level of relatively new accessibility.

Perennial - "In The Midnight Hour" | Album Review

Perennial - "In The Midnight Hour" | Album Review

In the Midnight Hour is easily CT band Perennial’s most fully realized offering in a discography getting to be full of high concept, high energy punk rippers. They retain everything that made them great previously – incendiary performances, huge sounding riffs with teeth, an interest in the studio – and tightened it up to surgical precision.

Abi Ooze - "Forestdale Sessions" | Album Review

Abi Ooze - "Forestdale Sessions" | Album Review

Abi Ooze is the recording project of Jade Baisa, an alumni of the NWI underground scene, Baisa continues to churn out records among the most genuinely melodic in punk. Forestdale Sessions, released by Rotten Apple, balances between rambunctious and intimate. This is power-pop for basements, alleyways, sidewalks, and bedrooms. 

Sightless Pit - "Lockstep Bloodwar" | Album Review

Sightless Pit - "Lockstep Bloodwar" | Album Review

Lockstep Bloodwar is the second album from Sightless Pit. The first featured a third collaborator, Kristin Hayter (Lingua Ignota), who split from the group on good terms between installments. Now a duo, Lee Buford (The Body) and Dylan Walker (Full of Hell) sought to fill the void left by Hayter with a dizzying array of guest features.

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Mach-Hommy & Tha God Fahim - "Notorious Dump Legends: Volume 2"

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Mach-Hommy & Tha God Fahim - "Notorious Dump Legends: Volume 2"

Mach-Hommy released his first new record of the year in the form of Notorious Dump Legends: Volume 2, a collaborative album together with Tha God Fahim. They are a great duo, whose voices fit together with aural perfection, melodic, focused, slick, raw, with their stream-of-conscious rhymes capturing a spark in each other.

Jordan Holtz - "Not Close For Comfort" | Album Review

Jordan Holtz - "Not Close For Comfort" | Album Review

New Hampshire feels particularly positioned as the sort of place that’ll seep into its inhabitants' expression. It’s beautiful, strange, flawed, and quiet - the perfect place to spend too much time inside your head. On Not Close For Comfort, the debut EP from Dover based singer-songwriter Jordan Holtz (Rick Rude), this sort of mood is abundant.

Pure Adult - "II" | Album Review

Pure Adult - "II" | Album Review

II (out on FatCat Records) is pure fuel. Pure Adult’s brand of imperfect-yet-pitch-perfect ‘noisymusik’ is nothing short of a tonic in days that feel ever-more apocalyptic, a propulsive journey that rewards a keener ear. The first listen gives you broad strokes and satisfying noise rock, but second and third listens reveal secrets, layers, wheels.

Swim Camp - "Steel Country" | Album Review

Swim Camp - "Steel Country" | Album Review

Steel Country, Swim Camp’s fourth album, is easily the Philly-based project’s most sonically confident album yet. Actualized by Tom Morris in 2015 as an outlet to learn guitar, Swim Camp is now two years shy of a decade old this year, and one will find it difficult to listen without feeling a little proud of how far the project has come. 

Oozing Wound - "We Cater To Cowards" | Album Review

Oozing Wound - "We Cater To Cowards" | Album Review

Oozing Wound are a heavy band born from the fertile stomping grounds of Chicago’s DIY scene and have a penchant for delivering albums chalk-full of songs too heavy to have made In Utero. We Cater to Cowards is something of a departure from previous releases, albeit not one as drastic as some of the discourse has made it out to be.

Neutral Milk Hotel - "The Collected Works of Neutral Milk Hotel" | Album Review

Neutral Milk Hotel - "The Collected Works of Neutral Milk Hotel" | Album Review

On the non-album live favorite “Engine,” Neutral Milk Hotel frontman Jeff Mangum rolls through “endless revisions to state what I mean.” This line is probably the best summation of the full-discography box set that Merge Records has released to celebrate the 25th anniversary of their breakthrough record, 1998’s In The Aeroplane Over The Sea.

The Drin - "Today My Friend You Drunk The Venom" | Album Review

The Drin - "Today My Friend You Drunk The Venom" | Album Review

It’d be very hard to build a case against this excellent record—out now on the increasingly indispensable Feel It Records—as anything but an exemplar in its field, an inspired melding of brooding post-punk, expansive kosmische and jangly psychedelia bound to leave a legion of decent-to-good imitations in its wake. 

Tennis - "Pollen" | Album Review

Tennis - "Pollen" | Album Review

As their sixth studio release, Pollen sees star-crossed lovers Alaina Moore and Pat Riley of Tennis fighting the powers that be. Caught in a violent collision of fate and free will, the darling indie duo prevails triumphant but not unscathed. Pollen is a pearl; a natural wonder that is worthy of reverie and intrusion of thought.  

The Tubs - "Dead Meat" | Album Review

The Tubs - "Dead Meat" | Album Review

The Tubs trade the thumping punk undertones of their former band (Joanna Gruesome) for shimmery jangle, an ode to the energetic melody of late 80s college rock. With layers of hooks and harmony swirling around dark and introspective lyrical themes, Dead Meat reveals itself slowly, a dense work of complex, vibrant pop.

Pile - "All Fiction" | Album Review

Pile - "All Fiction" | Album Review

Listening to All Fiction front to back, we are treated to an album of songs that tend to deviate from the typical rock band format. The energy of the album ebbs and flows, increasing the impact of the more energy-intense tracks. The guitar is not used as the centerpiece of songs, but its intensity is made all the more real when it does appear.

Patter - "Patter Theme" | Album Review

Patter - "Patter Theme" | Album Review

As we’ve said, Patter represents a "brilliant hodgepodge of indie rock, mathy pop, and slacker charm,“ which makes sense, given that they’re made up of members of three equally inventive Chi-Town outfits, Options, The Deals, and The Knees. We get a truly dazzling lil’ sampler platter across this spitfire of an EP.