Set in the woods of Harvey’s hometown of Dorset, I Inside The Old Year Dying constructs a folk-horror universe with the assistance of longtime collaborators, Flood and John Parish. Old Dorset dialect, musique concrète, field recordings, audio libraries, and standard instruments reshaped create surreal sounds that transport listeners.
GEL - "Only Constant" | Album Review
Only Constant foundationally resists pretentiousness. The music is physical and the band is earnest. GEL’s music, message and motive seem to be all in alignment– achieving an oft sought after goal for a band on the rise. On their full-length debut, GEL offers open arms to all that may fall in – no matter the form you might take.
African Head Charge - "A Trip To Bolgatanga" | Album Review
On A Trip To Bolgatanga, African Head Charge’s first new album in twelve years, lies a multicolored vision of psychedelic textures, sounds, and surely, a deep mystification of the outer realms of dub and reggae. Active since the early 1980s in the UK, the band encapsulates the spiritual drumming of Bonjo Iyabinghi Noah and producer Adrian Sherwood’s philosophy.
The Chives - "Supervision" | Album Review
it’s unlikely you won’t find something to love, or at the very least be entertained by on Supervision. The Chives have grown, if not necessarily matured, in both line-up and sound since their 2020 self-titled debut, but they haven’t lost the youthful exuberance and raw production that made that album work.
7xvethegenius & DJ Green Lantern - "The Genius Tape" | Album Review
7xvethegenius and DJ Green Lantern’s The Genius Tape is every bit as brilliant as the name would have you believe. The ten song project clocks in just under 29 minutes, but 7xvethegenius makes every second count. The Genius Tape is packed with witty lyricism, introspective self-reflection, and lush imagery.
Cory Hanson - "Western Cum" | Album Review
Big Girl - "Big Girl Vs. God" | Album Review
On their first full length album, Big Girl vs God, Big Girl front-person Kaitlin Pelkey delivers wonderful insight into their self and a sense of wonderment that shines even through the most haunting moments of self doubt and regret. Her cohorts in Big Girl bring a massive sense of pomp in the best way possible.
Hüsker Dü - "Tonite Longhorn" | Album Review
Pinch Points - "Mechanical Injury (Reissue)" | Album Review
Goo - "Squid Ink Sky" | Album Review
Squid Ink Sky is the second full length from the New York based Goo, a record that pushes their sound further than ever. Beck Zegans brings a unique, fresh, and open approach to songwriting that really shines. The album brings a melodic wallop, colored with sweeping and woozy keys which add a little more force.
ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Squitch - "Tumbledown Mountain"
Without giving consideration to the future or lack-there-of, it’s safe to say that Squitch have made their best record to date with Tumbledown Mountain, a collection of songs both personal and inherently complex. It’s an album that deals with the finality of things but as the band know, “it’s not the end.”
Krill "Lucky Leaves" | Album Review (10-Year Retrospective)
Califone - "Villagers" | Album Review
Califone essentially began as Rutili’s solo project derivative of his former band Red Red Meat and has positioned itself well within the experimental rock and folk scenes since, now a full-fledged musical project with regular contributors. Villagers is Califone’s most dignified and emotionally liberating project thus far.
Pardoner - "Peace Loving People" | Album Review
Pardoner have hit their stride. The SF quartet is known for guitar-driven tunes that straddle the line between pop-rock anthems and sludgy punk screed. Peace Loving People, their fourth LP, fully captures their singular sound built around the infectious interplay of the guitars and vocals of the main songwriters Max Freedland and Trey Flanigan.
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard - "PetroDragonic Apocalypse; or, Dawn of Eternal Night: An Annihilation of Planet Earth and the Beginning of Merciless Damnation" | Album Review
PetroDragonic Apocalypse sees the Aussie lads return to “thrash metal.” In a sense, nothing but the seeming violence of thrash will do the trick in stressing the importance of environmental awareness. In their new record, King Gizzard achieve this, with an even more brutal approach than their first full foray in Infest the Rats’ Nest.
Ganser - "Nothing You Do Matters" | Album Review
On Nothing You Do Matters, Ganser split the difference between the immediate and an emotional distance to create some of their best tracks yet, ending up with a dancey, atmospheric take on post-punk. Composed primarily by Ganser’s rhythm section, the EP diverges stylistically from the more caustic material on their last LP.
Feeble Little Horse - "Girl With Fish" | Album Review
Genuineness is the prime moral characteristic that defines Feeble Little Horse. The Pittsburgh quartet have stuck to an ethos of controlling every part of the creative process themselves. This DIY mantra plays through on Girl With Fish with its crushing shoegaze backbone interlaced with elements of sentimentality, gleaming with personality.
ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Geld - "Currency // Castration"
Ain’t shit pretty about Currency // Castration and that’s the beauty of it. The band’s third album is ensnared in filth and dissonance, at home amid the depravity, for better or worse, this is where we’re at and Geld aren’t delusional. Rather than collapse under the weight of it all, they chose to decimate, creating something that feels relevant and timeless.
Black Thought & El Michels Affair - "Glorious Game" | Album Review
On last year’s excellent Danger Mouse collaboration Cheat Codes, the Philadelphia native cemented his place among the great MCs. Now with Glorious Game, a collaboration with Brooklyn soul artist and producer Leon Michel (aka El Michels Affair), he’s able to step back and take a look back at what got him there in the first place.