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Courtesy - "Walk The Dog" | Post-Trash Premiere

Courtesy - "Walk The Dog" | Post-Trash Premiere

Courtey’s blend of styles is constantly transfixing, void of any pitfalls that often arise when trying to do too many things at once. With the band heading out on tour, they’re celebrating the upcoming dates with "Preferences" and "Walk The Dog," two new singles recorded during the Check The Milk sessions.

More Klementines - "Who Remembers Light" | Album Review

More Klementines - "Who Remembers Light" | Album Review

Four years have passed since More Klementines’ eponymous debut album came out—or have they? “Hot Peace” is making me pleasantly dizzy. Then again, what else could one have expected from More Klementines? Michael Kiefer, Jon Schlesinger, and Steubs are back at it with Who Remembers Light, sounding like they’ve never not been at it.

Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (August 22nd - August 28th)

Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (August 22nd - August 28th)

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.

Covert Stations - "I Melt With You" (Modern English cover) | Post-Trash Premiere

Covert Stations - "I Melt With You" (Modern English cover) | Post-Trash Premiere

For their faithful yet muscular take on the classic, Craig Cirinelli (DTDA) is joined by the third Covert Stations line-up of Chris Alfano (East of the Wall), Brian Leahy (Eyeswan), and Guy Nemo (Eyeswan), a selection of New Jersey based rock lifers who have dabbled in everything from post-hardcore and prog to folk, blues, and “indie rock”.

Kamikaze Palm Tree - "Mint Chip" | Album Review

Kamikaze Palm Tree - "Mint Chip" | Album Review

Dylan Hadley and Cole Berliner, the LA duo better known as Kamikaze Palm Tree, are definitely not afraid to dabble with art-rock/pop or to take musical risks. Mint Chip, their second album (and first for Drag City) shows that taking musical risks can pay off if you know what you are doing and have the imagination and capabilities to do so.

Queen of Jeans - "Hiding In Place" | Album Review

Queen of Jeans - "Hiding In Place" | Album Review

Scanning the spectrum of love lost and found, Hiding In Place, the new EP from Philadelphia’s Queen of Jeans, revels in thoughtful exploration. Their first original release since 2018 briefly touches on the stretches of loneliness, excitement, insecurity and resentment inherent to relationships beginning and end.

Kamikaze Palm Tree Discuss "Mint Chip," Having Fun Making Music, and Inspirations | Feature Interview

Kamikaze Palm Tree Discuss "Mint Chip," Having Fun Making Music, and Inspirations | Feature Interview

Mint Chip, Kamikaze Palm Tree’s sophomore record, follows a backwards logic where making everything more bonkers somehow just makes it more coherent. Theirs is a proprietary recipe, not easily explained, but ahead of the release, the duo indulged questions about growing extra arms and the dog who inspires them.

Collapsed Skull - "Eternity Maze" | Album Review

Collapsed Skull - "Eternity Maze" | Album Review

Pennsylvania’s Collapsed Skull is a new three-piece powerviolence band featuring members of Full of Hell. Their sound on the jaw-dropping debut EP Eternity Maze is a sort of genre-salad that mashes together powerviolence, hardcore, grindcore, death metal, and harsh noise all broken up by hip-hop, spoken word, and acoustic samples.

Pile - "Songs Known Together, Alone" | Album Review

Pile - "Songs Known Together, Alone" | Album Review

In August of 2021, Pile released an LP perfect for laying under the stars; Songs Known Together, Alone consisting of newly recorded tracks pulled from Pile's massive collection accompanied by a clever change in production. The tracks are all reimagined versions of Pile songs recorded solo by frontman Rick Maguire.

Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (August 8th - August 21st)

Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (August 8th - August 21st)

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.

Ty Sorrell - "HomeGrown" | Album Review

Ty Sorrell - "HomeGrown" | Album Review

The record’s easygoing and nostalgic pop/R&B vibes call up the feeling of leaning back in an air-conditioned booth on a humid summer night. If you stop and listen, you can overhear Ty Sorrell at the next table over, reminiscing and exchanging secret handshakes with the other Richmonders who sit down to catch up.

Salt Lick - "The Gift of Missing" LP | Post-Trash Premiere

Salt Lick - "The Gift of Missing" LP | Post-Trash Premiere

Simply put, Salt Lick is a die-hard group of musicians within the Seattle DIY scene. Over the past half decade, the band has been sizzling and simmering a handful of slow-burn releases. Salt Lick never fails to impress live and have certainly elevated their songwriting and studio chops with their most recent release, The Gift of Missing.

Action Bronson - "Cocodrillo Turbo" | Album Review

Action Bronson - "Cocodrillo Turbo" | Album Review

All of Action Bronson’s best work treats music like Calvinball—meticulous and detailed worlds seemingly unspooling in a stream of consciousness. Cocodrillo Turbo is no different, as it loosely ties together a beasts-of-the-wilderness theme through nature show samples and a production palette of fuzzed-out, hungover psychedelia.

Kinsella & Pulse - "Replicant Heart" Music Video | Post-Trash Premiere

Kinsella & Pulse - "Replicant Heart" Music Video | Post-Trash Premiere

“Replicant Heart” is the second track on the EP, a beautifully dark and brooding song, eerie and contemplative at times, but also full of life. Pulse and Kinsella trade vocals, hers clear and prescient and his slightly fuzzed out and distant. The song has a narrative structure of its own, mirroring the five act dramatic structure of the rest of the EP.

Haunted Horses - "The Worst Has Finally Happened" | Album Review

Haunted Horses - "The Worst Has Finally Happened" | Album Review

Recorded at Electric Wall in Seattle and mastered by These Arms Are Snakes’ drummer Chris Common, The Worst Has Finally Happened is a tangible document to be added to the Three One G family of relevant punk. Haunted Horses have frequency shaking all around. The punches keep coming, but it is somehow soothing.

Spacemoth - "No Past No Future" | Album Review

Spacemoth - "No Past No Future" | Album Review

Anxiety was getting in the way of Maryam Qudus’ creative work as Spacemoth until she realized she could channel her concerns through her synthesizers. The end result is an impressive debut album for the sought-after analog producer – the 13-track record, No Past No Future, is some of the most potent retro-futurism out there.

Pavement - "Westing (by Musket and Sextant)" (Reissue) | Album Review

Pavement - "Westing (by Musket and Sextant)" (Reissue) | Album Review

In its own manner, compiling Pavement’s “tortured context” comprised of the self-released Slay Tracks 1933-1969, early singles, and flexi-disc cuts made Westing (by Musket and Sextant) a 7" gold mine of exciting dipshit noise whose collage cover and phrases and song titles alluded to its own canon subversion.

Osees - "A Foul Form" | Album Review

Osees - "A Foul Form" | Album Review

After the more experimental endeavors of recent years, A Foul Form both carves out new ground for Dwyer and company to dig into while also calling back to the raucousness and comparative simplicity of Coachwhips and the Thee Oh Sees era. A Foul Form is taut and crackling. It burns white hot; the path it blazes is direct.