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Portishead - "Roseland NYC Live 25" (Reissue) | Album Review

Portishead - "Roseland NYC Live 25" (Reissue) | Album Review

Roseland Live NYC – which paired a gripping performance by Gibbons and co. with a full band and orchestral strings, horns, and woodwinds – would be the last music Portishead would release for over a decade. Now, 25 years later, the band has reissued the album as Roseland NYC Live 25, newly remastered, and for the first time in its complete form.

Baked & The Zells - "Queensburgh: A Baked & Zells Split" | Album Review

Baked & The Zells - "Queensburgh: A Baked & Zells Split" | Album Review

It is a sign of mutual respect and adoration to make something together as one package to grace listeners with. Queensburgh by Baked and The Zells is the latest addition to the DIY canon of splits. Two of independent rock's heaviest hitters have delivered a special split that anyone will be able to appreciate.

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Blacklisters - "Auf Dem Tisch"

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Blacklisters - "Auf Dem Tisch"

Blacklisters strike the perfect level of sardonic humor and cultural disgust, so interwoven it’s hard to tell exactly where one ends and the other begins. Sludge and bludgeoning density are paired with acidic noise and a stumbling resolve that feels like a reprieve from polite society or a scourge on meatheads worldwide.

Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (November 20th - December 3rd)

Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (November 20th - December 3rd)

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.

Hooper Crescent - "Karaoke Love" | Post-Trash Premiere

Hooper Crescent - "Karaoke Love" | Post-Trash Premiere

Brunswick, Australia’s Hooper Crescent are relying on a formula with their second album, Essential Tremors. While the quintet could have returned to the guitar heavy tangled post-punk of their debut, they’ve opted to push into new territories, exploring a different set of sounds while keeping their established framework in tact.

June McDoom - "With Strings" | Album Review

June McDoom - "With Strings" | Album Review

After her brilliant self-titled EP from 2022, New York’s June McDoom was able to jump over the sophomore hurdle with another EP, simply titled With Strings. That light and easy touch McDoom exhibited on her initial release doesn’t leave her here, with the two covers and two original songs.

Ther - "I'm Not Good At Making Plans (Live at Johnny Brenda's)" LP | Post-Trash Premiere

Ther - "I'm Not Good At Making Plans (Live at Johnny Brenda's)" LP | Post-Trash Premiere

Philadelphia DIY linchpin Heather Jones is sharing a new live solo set tomorrow, and we’re thrilled to have first dibs. I’m Not Good at Making Plans was recorded at Johnny Brenda’s and features a collaborative improvised tape performance between Jones and bedroom pop artist Pinkie Normal.

Reciprocate - "Soul To Burn" LP | Post-Trash Premiere

Reciprocate - "Soul To Burn" LP | Post-Trash Premiere

Soul To Burn, is a wild ride of high voltage rock ‘n’ roll grooves and swaggering hooks, but it’s also inherently complex, the sound in a constant state of contortion. These songs are accessible from first glance (“Rhodia” is a smash hit), with dissonant vibrations and riotous rhythmic shifts bending to create something casually digestible.

Mia June - "Don't Forget Your Bags" | Album Review

Mia June - "Don't Forget Your Bags" | Album Review

Blotted and vibrant are the bruises that we acquire in the midst of growing up. In the midst of those challenges is nineteen year old Perth singer/songwriter Mia June and her debut EP, Don’t Forget Your Bags. Out on Father/Daughter Records, we find her with a collection of songs that feel both fresh and exhilaratingly spirited.

A Fractured Narrative: Luke Towart of Wurld Series Talks "The Giant’s Lawn" | Feature Interview

A Fractured Narrative: Luke Towart of Wurld Series Talks "The Giant’s Lawn" | Feature Interview

Wurld Series filter influences including Guided by Voices, Jim O’Rourke, and Robert Wyatt through a DIY lens that’s uniquely their own, balancing Luke Towart’s sturdy songcraft with pensive, pastoral experimentation. Post-Trash caught up with Towart recently to discuss these and other influences on their sound, and to talk The Giants Lawn.

Super Infinity - "Palace" | Album Review

Super Infinity - "Palace" | Album Review

There is a new softness in Rob Grote’s music as Super Infinity, with his seven song release Palace. The songs hover between playfulness and childlike awe: jangling reverb, words that tumble and river over themselves, and layered head voice. Grote said he wrote these songs “as a reprieve from recordings that were taking much more labor.”

Algae Dust - "Halves" | Post-Trash Premiere

Algae Dust - "Halves" | Post-Trash Premiere

In Hindsight, the full length debut from St. Louis’ Algae Dust is out this Friday, December 1st, just in time to bring some warmth to the oncoming chill. Following a split with Hennen back in 2021 that mostly featured Alison Setili playing solo, their Sad Cactus Records debut moves away from the gentle sound of bedroom pop.

Hotline TNT - "Cartwheel" | Album Review

Hotline TNT - "Cartwheel" | Album Review

Cartwheel is much more pop inclined than prior releases with its vivid, gleaming instrumentation and tones. This navigates away from the scuzzy punk energy that has defined Hotline TNT to date, but overall, the structure of the new songs hasn’t changed that profusely. They still follow a similar formula but it’s expressed differently.

Big Mess - "Caoutchouteuse"

Big Mess - "Caoutchouteuse"

Big Mess come roaring back to life on Heroic Captains of Industry, a new full length album due out on January 1st. The album, initially recorded in 2018 saw some delays as life and pandemics took the focus away from the band, is pure Big Mess, colossally heavy with nuanced writing that see-saws and tugs in opposing directions at will.

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Feeling Figures - "Migration Magic"

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Feeling Figures - "Migration Magic"

Montreal’s Feeling Figures make a kind of catchy, arty, punky garage rock that just sticks in your ear. Their latest record, Migration Magic, makes good on the promises of their tantalizing three song debut with ten new, self-recorded songs of skronky guitars and off-kilter vocal harmonies.

Slow Pulp - "Yard" | Album Review

Slow Pulp - "Yard" | Album Review

Slow Pulp introduce deeply sentimental themes of personal reflection and a new sound on their most recent album, Yard. The album is a further evolution of their sound as it brings together synth sounds from prior releases while continuing to lean towards more acoustics, which suits the nostalgic energy of the album’s entirety. 

L'Rain - "I Killed Your Dog" | Album Review

L'Rain - "I Killed Your Dog" | Album Review

With I Killed Your Dog, L’Rain are clearly seeking to further push the envelope, with an even broader theatrical scope, spine-chilling lyrics, and absolutely mesmerizing musicality and production. What makes it so special in the landscape of 2023 is that it implements hallmarks from the late 80’s and 90’s all the way up to our current moment.

Niecy Blues - "Exit Simulation" | Album Review

Niecy Blues - "Exit Simulation" | Album Review

Over its 41 minutes, Exit Simulation is an insistent listen, pervading and reverberating the walls of whatever space it can attain. The album is brilliantly paced to function as a transitory performance that assumes the song itself is only a part of a larger tapestry, requesting the full respect of its space to unfurl.