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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?
A weekly post highlighting but a few of our favorite new releases in splendid alphabetical order, brief and (hopefully) informative. There’s a lot of great music out every week and these are but some of the many we think you should check out.
Sydney Salk’s “Various Artists” returns to round up some of summer 2025’s best compilations and the causes they support, with choice picks from Tlooth, Kilynn Lunsford, Added Dimensions, The Wrong Sky, and Chaos International.
Post-Trash’s Kurt Orzeck sits down with legendary Scratch Acid guitarist Brett Bradford talks the band’s early days, his introduction to punk, his current band Suckling, and offers exclusive shots from early Scratch Acid performances.
Cameron Wisch is something of an indie rock veteran. Three years after the release of Dust Star’s first LP, he’s back with a new outfit, Soft Surface. Blue Dream recalls an era of guitar music when you didn’t have to hide sincerity behind irony.
Fans of gentle cynicism and riot grrl sensibility are in for a treat with the second album from Glasgow’s quirky punk outfit Dancer. They escape the second album slump, polishing their sound and keeping with the scrappy tongue-in-cheek nature and nostalgia that makes them such a one-of-a-kind group
Taurus is a writerly album. Although many individual tracks sport repetitive lyrics, these repetitions work together to diverge from pattern, creating rich micro-narratives and character studies. For an album made up of outtakes, Taurus absolutely speaks for itself.
Philadelphia’s Snoozer make classic indie rock: catchy, quick, and immediate. Brothers Tom and Mike Kelly are sharing “Just Sayin’,” the lead single from Snoozer’s Born Losers Records debut Little Giants.
A weekly post highlighting but a few of our favorite new releases in splendid alphabetical order, brief and (hopefully) informative. There’s a lot of great music out every week and these are but some of the many we think you should check out.
Irk are here to pester us with the truth that fear-inducing art forms make us feel alive more than any other varieties. The Seeing House is proof positive that fear, particularly fear of the unknown, cannot be rinsed off after a person’s interaction with a piece of art is complete.
Automatic’s music smuggles in their politics through satirical and incisive lyrics, nod-along grooves, hip-shaking beats, and catchy choruses. Post-Trash’s Benji Heywood chats with the LA-based electro-kraut three piece about everyday resistance and their new record Is It Now?
Technopolice’s debut album, Chien De La Chasse embodies the energy of a dance hall with wooden floors where everybody’s feet can’t stop moving. The Marseille-based band’s punk-garage and gritty sound infusion is fast paced, dynamic, and will make you want to cut rug.
Phil Spector’s Gun blend their penchant for in-your-face immediacy and late-70s riffage that’s been passed through one of those everything-shredders at a recycling plant with a renewed urgency and a surprisingly big pinch of real tenderness. Today, Post-Trash is thrilled to premiere Another Side Of…, the latest full length from the Philadelphia outfit.
Due out on October 17th via Feel It Records, Citric Dummies’ "Split With Turnstile is brash and hilarious, overloaded with both punchlines and riffs, propulsive energy and beer guzzling joyfulness. These are concerning times and a little irreverence goes a long way.
It’s A Beautiful Place goes so many places and explores so many ideas so succinctly, that it’s almost a shock when it’s over, but it’s Water From Your Eyes’ sharpest collection of songs yet.
Led by singer-songwriter Josephine Luhman, Chicago band Josephine pluck out rich folk pop melodies suffused with a quiet but insistent spirit. Today, Post-Trash is thrilled to premiere the project’s latest single, “Does It Pay.”
Baby Tyler comes unglued once again with “Cheap Plastic Coffins,” a brain rattling effort played at an all out sprint. With a tempo capable of bursting through concrete walls, Tyler Fassnacht wastes no time, digging into the harsh hardcore framework with a feral melody that illuminates unlikely hooks.
Felt like forever is a project that will resonate with everyone, drawing on inklings of nostalgia from melodic themes to softly spun lyrical repetition. It’s easy to be wrapped up and day dream away as SCayos invokes the growing pains and triumphs of a time in our lives that can feel like forever.
A weekly post highlighting but a few of our favorite new releases in splendid alphabetical order, brief and (hopefully) informative. There’s a lot of great music out every week and these are but some of the many we think you should check out.
You’re Weird Now has many twists and turns and important questions to pose, as well as amusing literary and cultural references, but the band is in full force and these songs will not be overpowered by anything due to the awe-inspiring art of Guerilla Toss.
Minneapolis’ she’s green has returned with another ethereal album Chrysalis. The record satisfies the crave for the band’s authentic approach to shoegaze and their emotionally in-tune dynamic, promising to impress old fans and new.
Titanic, the collaborative project composed of avant-garde cellist Mabe Fratti and multi-instrumentalist I la Catolica, revels in free-wheeling compositions. On HAGEN, the duo directs their heartfelt musicality into something more firm and focused, utilizing their freewheeling spirit to elevate the feelings into a burnished extreme.
Four years after the release of Hélène Barbier’s great second album, Regulus, the Montreal based musician returns with new album Panorama, due out November 14th via Bonsound, a record bursting with cosmic beauty and tangled clarity.
Post-Trash’s Khagan Aslanov sits with experimental double bassist Brandon Lopez to discuss his musical background, recording modus, and the inherently political nature of being an artist in 2025.
The St. Louis-based, grungy dreampop group Algae Dust are back. Rearranging is an album of growth, gains, and loss, looking deep into the internal effects of one’s relations and environment.
A weekly post highlighting but a few of our favorite new releases in splendid alphabetical order, brief and (hopefully) informative. There’s a lot of great music out every week and these are but some of the many we think you should check out.
I guess we all want our lives to be like a song. Verse and verse building to a resolute, resolving chorus. Perry Eaton, the MA-based singer-songwriter behind the new Americana project Ivy Boy, knows that life doesn’t really work out that way—that threads are left tangled and lost.
That tacit slippage between sweetness and bitterness is the heartwood of Wednesday’s newest and most mature record, Bleeds. Every image in Karly Hartzman’s writing comes back to this taproot: how things that are supposed to heal you can also hurt you.
Formed in Boston nearly 20 years ago, the band proves that the passage of time brings with it enhanced creativity and brand new ideas. On Sunshine and Balance Beams, expect fuzz-laden guitar, crooning vocals and orchestral flourishes from Pile’s stellar lineup.
Boston’s Pariah Dog are a new band from Max Green and Tré Hester, who both spent time playing in the earliest Great Deceivers line-up. They’ve decided to reunite and start a new project with their intricate and gorgeous debut album, Stirring Truth, due out on October 3rd.
POST-TRASH PLAYLIST:
NEW & UPCOMING RELEASES:
October 07:
- EXEK - Live at RRR
October 08:
- Bruiser and Bicycle - Deep Country
October 10:
- A Perfect Circle - Mer De Noms (25th Anniversary Edition)
- Black Eyes - Hostile Design
- Endless Joy - Endless Joy
- Greg Jamie - Across a Violet Pasture
- Guitar - We're Headed To The Lake
- Hannah Frances - Nested In Tangles
- Jay Worthy - Once Upon A Time Vol. 2
- Lorelle Meets The Obsolete - Corporal
- Mobb Deep - Infinite
- Possible Humans - Standing Around Alive
- Sanguisugabogg - Hideous Aftermath
- Tom Petty - Wildflowers (30th Anniversary Reissue)
- Vangas - You Left Us In the Spring
- Vile Apparition - Malignity
October 14:
- 7xvethegenius - Self 7xve III
October 15:
- Systems Officer - My Traps Your Mazes
October 16:
- Speed Week - Weak Speed
October 17:
- Baby Tyler - Sucker With A Dream
- Bar Italia - Some Like It Hot
- Bloodsports - Anything Can Be A Hammer
- Boris - dronevil - example - (reissue)
- Boris - Pink (20th Anniversary Reissue)
- Citric Dummies - Split With Turnstile
- Cusp - What I Want Doesn't Want Me Back
- Good Flying Birds - Talulah's Tape (reissue)
- Imploders - Targeted For Termination
- Jeff Tobias - One Hundredfold Now in This Age
- Living Hour - Internal Drone Infinity
- Pixies - Demos
- Rumah Sakit - Rumah Sakit 25 (reissue)
- Sam Woodring - Mechanical Bull
- Soga - Corrosión
- Spiral Wave Nomads - The Weightless Sea
- They Are Gutting A Body of Water - LOTTO