Greet Death - "Die In Love" | Album Review
Adeline Hotel - "Watch the Sunflowers" | Album Review
Sword II - "Electric Hour" | Album Review
With Electric Hour, Sword II have full control over their resilient, variegated version of rock. They emerge into the present with a singular, science-fiction-esque, “easy to listen to uneasiness” that so subtly and succinctly captures the paranoid scrutiny of society today, while offering pathways towards collective resilience.
Good Flying Birds - "Talulah's Tape" | Album Review
Low Healer - "Hold Music" | Album Review
Snooper - "Worldwide" | Album Review
Joyeria - "Graceful Degradation" | Album Review
Erosion - "Invasive Species" | Album Review
Claire Rousay - "A Little Death" | Album Review
Prewn - "System" | Album Review
Mount Eerie - "Night Palace" | Album Review
Cate Le Bon – "Michelangelo Dying" | Album Review
Michelangelo Dying is a strong collection of memory and hurt. It’s a reminder to dance despite the sorrow. Cate Le Bon has a gift of cutting through the crap, delivering a record that is at once pure and tender, yet brutally honest and descriptive of the humiliation and joy of falling in (and out) of love.
Upchuck - "I'm Nice Now" | Album Review
They Are Gutting a Body of Water - "LOTTO" | Album Review
Dragnet - "Dragnet Reigns" | Album Review
Sparks | Show Review
Vangas - "You Left Us In the Spring" | Album Review
Nape Neck - "The Shallowest End" | Album Review
Nape Neck’s latest is entrancing, each song’s rhythm and gibberish ghoulishness offering a deeper look into this new world, this new era of no wave music. The songs on The Shallowest End lose control and give way to an abundance of purely human sound. Is The Shallowest End about the absence of control, or the overarching omnipotence of it?




















