Vibrations Now is the new EP from Fantastic Purple Spots, the duo of Barrett Jones and Dave Junker out of Austin, Texas, four songs full of folk-ish dreamy psychedelia that lingers in the eardrums well after its done. They lean into the spacier aspects of their influences and recall the fuzzier elements of a band like Brian Jonestown Massacre.
Fugitive Bubble - "Delusion" | Album Review
The elusive Fugitive Bubble bursts through the Olympia, WA music scene to wreak havoc on conscientious, hard-core thrill seekers with their glorious re-issue of Delusion through Sorry State Records. Blazing through ten tracks in less than twenty minutes, Delusion flashes teeth to freedom, and casts off the cuffs of bondage.
Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (February 12th - February 25th)
BALACLAVA - "Pills on Vacation" | Post-Trash Premiere
BALACLAVA originally started as a solo of Dylan Joyce aka BALA, but has now become a five-piece live band based in Ridgewood, Queens. The looming question that they seek to answer is, “What does animated trash sound like?” Their EP, THE 1/4 INCH ALMANAC, is out March 1st with tapes via Orlando based label Godless America.
ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Mary Timony - "Untame The Tiger"
Timony epitomizes the rock-and-roll lifer, a journey-person musician who has integrated different genres through a steady output. This new solo album feels different, however. Though she has never been absent, Untame the Tiger sounds like both a culmination of these prolific decades and a re-introduction.
Friko - "Where We've Been, Where We Go From Here" | Album Review
Friko is the latest band from Chicago’s expansive indie scene to turn heads with the release of their debut full length. In an impressive and complex blossom of chamber-pop, post-punk, and poetic spite, the duo have loomed together a blistering quilt of melodies, moving compositions, and notable spine-shivering anthems.
Twice Eyes - "Dreamt" | Post-Trash Premiere
Omni - "Souvenir" | Album Review
Souvenir is Omni’s second LP on Sub Pop and fourth overall. It has that same disciplined, musical excellence we've come to expect from them, and the ideas on here remain as exquisite as ever. It's been over four years since their last (and strongest) album Networker, and some subtle adjustments have been made.
Wrangling Brains with Jolie Laide | Feature Interview
If there can be such a thing as a silver lining to stragedy, perhaps part of it is Nina Nastasia’s new band Jolie Laide, which started as a startlingly productive long distance project with Jeff MacLeod and has since grown into a full band. Talking to them, it became clear why the band’s growth has been so propulsive. Besides obviously being close friends, they are stoked.
Ty Segall - "Three Bells" | Album Review
The passing of the lyric writing and, often, vocal duties, to his partner Denée Segall and collaborator, emphasizes the general musical direction Ty Segall seems to be taking his project. Both this record and his prior album, “Hi, Hello,” share what feels like less of an urgency to arrive at a specific destination.
Al Harper - "Plaster of Paris" | Post-Trash Premiere
Al Harper has been a part of the San Francisco DIY scene for years now, often working with noisy lo-fi projects like Tony Jay and Eternal Drag. She’s set to follow up here solo debut with The Analemma Observation League, due out February 23 via Take a Turn Records, and she just shared the second single “Plaster of Paris.”
Cusp - "Window" | Post-Trash Premiere
Last year saw the release of You Can Do It All, introducing Cusp to a wider audience, the songs equal parts muscular and gorgeous, heartfelt but heavy. Everything about it was well-crafted, Jen Bender’s memorable songwriting the spark. That spark grows ever brighter on Thanks So Much, due out March 15th, a triumphantly defining moment.
ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Rome Streetz - "Noise Kandy 5"
Climax Landers - "Play It Cool" | Post-Trash Premiere
The NYC super crew are back with their first full length in six years. Zenith No Effects is out May 10 via Gentle Reminder, Home Late, and Intellectual Birds Records. “Play it Cool,” is a tense and subdued number a few simmering moments from boil. It never quite bubbles over, leaving the listener with a collage of agitation and unease.
Spiritualized - "Amazing Grace" (Reissue) | Album Review
Throughout their career, Spiritualized has transformed psychedelic rock. They’ve taken seemingly small steps in re-shaping the standard formulas and they’ve taken big leaps into the unknown. At that, their best albums usually include both. That’s exactly what was happening on their fifth album Amazing Grace, newly reissues last month.
A Very Special Episode - "Smolder" | Post-Trash Premiere
Tetchy - "All In My Head" | Album Review
All in My Head, the latest EP from the Maggie Denning led NYC quartet Tetchy, continues to cement them as one of the more creative and fun punk bands around. As a songwriter Denning continues to examine and attack life with equal amounts of passion and fury, unleashing strengths and a new level of depth.
Godcaster - "Godcaster" | Album Review
Art-rockers Godcaster, based in Brooklyn, have blessed the ears of underground music fans with their self-titled sophomore album. The sextet comprised of Bruce Ebersol, Judson Kolk, Jan Fontana, Von Kolk, David McFaul, and Ryan West have captured their theatrical and chaotic energy on this record, transcending any of their other work.
Dr Sure's Unusual Practice - "Celebration" | Post-Trash Premiere
Following last year’s excellent BUBBLE (billed as a “mixtape” upon release), the band return with a new proper album, their third full length, Total Reality. Due out April 19th via Marthouse Records and Erste Theke Tontraeger, it’s fair to say that each successive DSUP record is better than the last, and they’ve definitely upped the ante.
Wet Dip - "Smell of Money" | Album Review
The Austin-based trio make bilingual no-wave that is unsettlingly anxious but also life-affirming and necessary. Their debut album, Smell of Money, is pervaded by pounding riffs, staticky, screeching guitars, and entrancing vocals. The music is challenging and rewarding and extremely singular in the current landscape.