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Wet Trident - "Complex Slide" | Post-Trash Exclusive Premiere

Wet Trident - "Complex Slide" | Post-Trash Exclusive Premiere

While the band features Lubec's own Eddie Charlton (bass/vocals) and Matt Dressen (guitar/vocals), Wet Trident takes a decidedly more post-hardcore approach to their sound, orbiting in a world closer to late 90's bands like Recover, At The Drive-In, and a dash of Polvo for good measure. The trio's sound is dense and flailing, free of restraint and full of emotive energy.

Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (September 11th - October 1st)

Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (September 11th - October 1st)

Welcome to FUZZY MEADOWS, where we recap the past week in music. We're sharing our favorite releases of the week in the form of albums, singles, and music videos along with the "further listening" section of new and notable releases from around the web.

Blacklisters - "Dart" | Album Review

Blacklisters - "Dart" | Album Review

As the byproduct of a studio session for Too Pure Singles Club, Dart captures the band in their natural state of chaos particularly attractive in the indefatigable percussing, dissonant guitar ambling, and onomatopoeic caterwauling, which often sounds more like a second dissonant guitar than any human vocal emanation.

Sleepies - "Melt To You" EP | Post-Trash Exclusive Premiere

Sleepies - "Melt To You" EP | Post-Trash Exclusive Premiere

Built upon punk scorn and raw yet catchy indie rock, a sound the have perfected over the years, the rest of the record expands outward, squirming in all directions. We mentioned they relied on sonic diversity, claiming "the band take four divergent paths, each as intriguing as the last" and now you can stream the album in full, ahead of tomorrow's release.

Sodium Beast - "Night Club Tonite" EP | Post-Trash Exclusive Premiere

Sodium Beast - "Night Club Tonite" EP | Post-Trash Exclusive Premiere

Brooklyn's Sodium Beast return with their sophomore EP and a new found aggression that rips from noise rock start to fuzzy pop finish. Night Club Tonite picks up the ragged post-punk sound of Hit Parade, blending the band's "college rock" influences with harsher elements, a reflective change of the year between releases.